相关参考文献
注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。An experimental comparison of human social learning strategies: payoff-biased social learning is adaptive but underused
Alex Mesoudi
EVOLUTION AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR (2011)
Variable Cultural Acquisition Costs Constrain Cumulative Cultural Evolution
Alex Mesoudi
PLOS ONE (2011)
Social learning among Congo Basin hunter-gatherers
Barry S. Hewlett et al.
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2011)
On the nature of cultural transmission networks: evidence from Fijian villages for adaptive learning biases
Joseph Henrich et al.
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2011)
One cultural parent makes no culture
Magnus Enquist et al.
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR (2010)
Gene-culture coevolution in the age of genomics
Peter J. Richerson et al.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2010)
Random copying, frequency-dependent copying and culture change
Alex Mesoudi et al.
EVOLUTION AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR (2009)
How Cultural Evolutionary Theory Can Inform Social Psychology and Vice Versa
Alex Mesoudi
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW (2009)
Late Pleistocene Demography and the Appearance of Modern Human Behavior
Adam Powell et al.
SCIENCE (2009)
Social intelligence, human intelligence and niche construction
Kim Sterelny
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2007)
Towards a unified science of cultural evolution
Alex Mesoudi et al.
BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES (2006)
Demography and cultural evolution: How adaptive cultural processes can produce maladaptive losses - The Tasmanian case
J Henrich
AMERICAN ANTIQUITY (2004)
Random drift and culture change
RA Bentley et al.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2004)
A model for tool-use traditions in primates: implications for the coevolution of culture and cognition
CP van Schaik et al.
JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION (2003)
Cultural transmission and the diffusion of innovations: Adoption dynamics indicate that biased cultural transmission is the predominate force in behavioral change
J Henrich
AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST (2001)