Literature DB >> 1180359

Fission-fusion and lineal effect: aspects of the population structure of the Semai Senoi of Malaysia.

A G Fix.   

Abstract

Analysis of histories and genealogies from seven relatively unacculturated, swidden-farming Semai settlements shows that the composition of local groups fluctuates through time. This instability is similar to a pattern which Neel and his colleagues have suggested is typical of primitive society, the fission-fusion model. In addition, the individuals comprising Semai fission groups are kinsmen which implies that the number of independent genomes represented is markedly less than the number of individual migrants (the lineal effect). Fission groups may form new villages or fuse with an established settlement. In either case, the genetic effects of such migration are more pronounced than would be expected on the basis of founder effect or random migration. Despite several conspicuous differences in social organization between the Semai and the South American Indians (e.g., bilateral vs. unilineal descent) whose population structure provided the empirical basis for the fission-fusion, lineal effect model, the basic similarities are striking. The Semai case thus lends support to the proposition that this pattern may be of some generality in technologically primitive populations.

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Year:  1975        PMID: 1180359     DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.1330430216

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol        ISSN: 0002-9483            Impact factor:   2.868


  2 in total

1.  A model of kin-migration in plants.

Authors:  D A Levin; A G Fix
Journal:  Theor Appl Genet       Date:  1989-03       Impact factor: 5.699

2.  Causes, consequences, and kin bias of human group fissions.

Authors:  Robert S Walker; Kim R Hill
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  2014-12
  2 in total

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