Literature DB >> 21135912

Can Traditions Emerge from the Interaction of Stimulus Enhancement and Reinforcement Learning? An Experimental Model.

Luke J Matthews1, Annika Paukner, Stephen J Suomi.   

Abstract

The study of social learning in captivity and behavioral traditions in the wild are two burgeoning areas of research, but few empirical studies have tested how learning mechanisms produce emergent patterns of tradition. Studies have examined how social learning mechanisms that are cognitively complex and possessed by few species, such as imitation, result in traditional patterns, yet traditional patterns are also exhibited by species that may not possess such mechanisms. We propose an explicit model of how stimulus enhancement and reinforcement learning could interact to produce traditions. We tested the model experimentally with tufted capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella), which exhibit traditions in the wild but have rarely demonstrated imitative abilities in captive experiments. Monkeys showed both stimulus enhancement learning and a habitual bias to perform whichever behavior first obtained them a reward. These results support our model that simple social learning mechanisms combined with reinforcement can result in traditional patterns of behavior.

Entities:  

Year:  2010        PMID: 21135912      PMCID: PMC2996617          DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1433.2010.01224.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Anthropol        ISSN: 0002-7294


  29 in total

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Review 5.  Cultural transmission in an ever-changing world: trial-and-error copying may be more robust than precise imitation.

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6.  Imitation is necessary for cumulative cultural evolution in an unfamiliar, opaque task.

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8.  Human-introduced long-term traditions in wild redfronted lemurs?

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