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The evolution of prestige - Freely conferred deference as a mechanism for enhancing the benefits of cultural transmission

Journal

EVOLUTION AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages 165-196

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S1090-5138(00)00071-4

Keywords

status; prestige; prestige-biased transmission; cultural transmission; social learning; dual inheritance theory

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This paper advances an information goods theory that explains prestige processes as an emergent product of psychological adaptations that evolved to improve the quality of information acquired via cultural transmission. Natural selection favored social learners who could evaluate potential models and copy the most successful among them. In order to improve the fidelity and comprehensiveness of such ranked-biased copying, social learners further evolved dispositions to sycophantically ingratiate themselves with their chosen models, so as to gain close proximity to, and prolonged interaction with, these models. Once common, these dispositions created, at the group level, distributions of deference that new entrants may adaptively exploit to decide who to begin copying. This generated a preference for models who seem generally popular, Building on social exchange theories, we argue that a wider range of phenomena associated with prestige processes can more plausibly be explained by this simple theory than by others, and we test its predictions with data from throughout the social sciences. In addition, we distinguish carefully between dominance (force or force threat) and prestige (freely conferred deference). (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc, All rights reserved.

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