4.6 Article

The Method of Local Restriction: in search of potential great ape culture-dependent forms

期刊

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
卷 96, 期 4, 页码 1441-1461

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12710

关键词

cumulative culture; culture‐ dependent forms; great ape behaviour; latent solutions; copying; locally restricted forms; locally unique forms

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资金

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [714658]
  2. Projekt DEAL
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [714658] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Humans possess a unique form of culture called cumulative culture, where behavioral forms evolve and become culture-dependent through copying. The 'Method of Local Restriction' helps identify culture-dependent forms, showing that some ape behaviors are locally restricted and potentially culture-dependent. Overall, ape cultures do not heavily rely on copying, but further investigation is needed to understand the extent of cultural dependence in non-human great apes.
Humans possess a perhaps unique type of culture among primates called cumulative culture. In this type of culture, behavioural forms cumulate changes over time, which increases their complexity and/or efficiency, eventually making these forms culture-dependent. As changes cumulate, culture-dependent forms become causally opaque, preventing the overall behavioural form from being acquired by individuals on their own; in other words, culture-dependent forms must be copied between individuals and across generations. Despite the importance of cumulative culture for understanding the evolutionary history of our species, how and when cumulative culture evolved is still debated. One of the challenges faced when addressing these questions is how to identify culture-dependent forms that result from cumulative cultural evolution. Here we propose a novel method to identify the most likely cases of culture-dependent forms. The 'Method of Local Restriction' is based on the premise that as culture-dependent forms are repeatedly transmitted via copying, these forms will unavoidably cumulate population-specific changes (due to copying error) and therefore must be expected to become locally restricted over time. When we applied this method to our closest living relatives, the great apes, we found that most known ape behavioural forms are not locally restricted (across domains and species) and thus are unlikely to be acquired via copying. Nevertheless, we found 25 locally restricted forms across species and domains, three of which appear to be locally unique (having been observed in a single population of a single species). Locally unique forms represent the best current candidates for culture-dependent forms in non-human great apes. Besides these rare exceptions, our results show that overall, ape cultures do not rely heavily on copying, as most ape behaviours appear across sites and/or species, rendering them unlikely to be culture-dependent forms resulting from cumulative cultural evolution. Yet, the locally restricted forms (and especially the three locally unique forms) identified by our method should be tested further for their potential reliance on copying social learning mechanisms (and in turn, for their potential culture-dependence). Future studies could use the Method of Local Restriction to investigate the existence of culture-dependent forms in other animal species and in the hominin archaeological record to estimate how widespread copying is in the animal kingdom and to postulate a timeline for the emergence of copying in our lineage.

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