| Literature DB >> 24940597 |
Christine A Caldwell1, Roland M Eve1.
Abstract
We report an experimental test of the hypothesis that contrasting traditions will persist for longer, maintaining cultural differences between otherwise similar groups, under conditions of uncertainty about payoffs from individual learning. We studied the persistence of two alternative, experimentally-introduced, task solutions in chains of human participants. In some chains, participants were led to believe that final payoffs would be difficult to predict for an innovative solution, and in others, participants were aware that their final payoff would be directly linked to their immediate solution. Although the difference between the conditions was illusory (only participants' impressions were manipulated, not actual payoffs) clear differences were found between the conditions. Consistent with predictions, in the chains that were less certain about final payoffs, the distinctive variants endured over several replacement "generations" of participants. In contrast, in the other chains, the influence of the experimentally-introduced solutions was rapidly diluted by participants' exploration of alternative approaches. The finding provides support for the notion that rates of cultural change are likely to be slower for behaviors for which the relationship between performance and payoff may be hard to predict.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24940597 PMCID: PMC4062479 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The chain design.
| Participant Number | Solutions Viewed |
| P1 | Seed 1, Seed 2 |
| P2 | Seed 2, P1 |
| P3 | P1, P2 |
| P4 | P2, P3 |
| P5 | P3, P4 |
Figure 1Examples of the seed towers: cubic (A) and tripod (B) designs.
The coding scheme used to quantify the similarity of participants’ towers to the two seed tower types.
| Tower Feature | Cubic | Tripod |
|
| Modeling clay and spaghetti (1) | Modeling clay only (1) |
|
| Square (1) | Triangular (1) |
|
| Vertical from modeling clay contactpoints, not converging to singlepoint (1) | Approximately vertical converging to single point (1) |
|
| Horizontal joins between verticaluprights (0.5), and converges to asingle point at highest point (0.5) | Single vertical element as highest level (0.5), with any/all upper levels as single verticals (0.5) |
Numbers indicate the points attributed to towers displaying those features as their cubic and tripod feature scores.
Mean features matching original seed tower, and mean tower heights.
| Payoff Condition | TowerType | Features Matching OriginalSeed Tower (see | Height (cm) | ||
| Early Gens. | Late Gens. | Early Gens. | Late Gens. | ||
|
|
| 3.00 (0.46) | 2.50 (0.36) | 32.75 (14.71) | 36.50 (9.29) |
|
| 2.38 (0.92) | 1.88 (0.16) | 60.00 (10.90) | 48.58 (10.81) | |
|
|
| 1.95 (0.94) | 1.10 (0.84) | 41.80 (15.11) | 43.13 (17.48) |
|
| 1.85 (0.95) | 1.40 (0.53) | 53.80 (14.62) | 56.73 (7.70) | |
Early indicates generations 1 & 2, and Late indicates generations 3, 4 & 5. Predictable and Unpredictable indicate the two different payoff conditions, and Cubic and Tripod indicate the two different seed tower conditions. Standard deviations are given in parentheses.
Figure 2Mean match proportion scores (+/−1SE) for the two payoff conditions.
Early indicates generations 1 & 2, and late indicates generations 3, 4 & 5.
Figure 3Mean heights of towers built by participants in the four conditions.