| Literature DB >> 27358505 |
Abstract
When the environment in which an organism lives deviates in some essential way from that to which it is adapted, this is described as "evolutionary mismatch," or "evolutionary novelty." The notion of mismatch plays an important role, explicitly or implicitly, in evolution-informed cognitive psychology, clinical psychology, and medicine. The evolutionary novelty of our contemporary environment is thought to have significant implications for our health and well-being. However, scientists have generally been working without a clear definition of mismatch. This paper defines mismatch as deviations in the environment that render biological traits unable, or impaired in their ability, to produce their selected effects (i.e., to perform their proper functions in Neander's sense). The machinery developed by Millikan in connection with her account of proper function, and with her related teleosemantic account of representation, is used to identify four major types, and several subtypes, of evolutionary mismatch. While the taxonomy offered here does not in itself resolve any scientific debates, the hope is that it can be used to better formulate empirical hypotheses concerning the effects of mismatch. To illustrate, it is used to show that the controversial hypothesis that general intelligence evolved as an adaptation to handle evolutionary novelty can, contra some critics, be formulated in a conceptually coherent way.Entities:
Keywords: Environment of evolutionary adaptedness; Evolution of intelligence; Evolutionary mismatch; Evolutionary novelty; Proper function; Teleosemantics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27358505 PMCID: PMC4901103 DOI: 10.1007/s10539-016-9527-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Philos ISSN: 0169-3867 Impact factor: 1.461
Four types of evolutionary mismatch/novelty
| Type | Subtype | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Type 1—Un(der)development-inducing: failure of a trait with a direct proper function to develop | Thalidomide in the womb prevents limbs from developing; reading from a young age causes myopia | |
| Type 2—Ineffectiveness-inducing: failure of a trait to perform its direct proper function despite unimpaired development |
| |
| Failure of a learning mechanism to produce the behavior for the sake of which it evolved | Apartment-living cats fail to learn to hunt when they are hungry | |
| Type 3—Misrepresentation-inducing: misrepresenting or failing to represent the environment | Imprinting on the wrong type of object | Jackdaws raised by humans court |
| Failing to imprint | Siblings reared apart fail to imprint sexual disgust on each other (to avoid inbreeding) | |
| An object emanates key stimuli in different intensities or combinations from an evolutionarily familiar object | Supernormal stimuli (e.g., food sweetened with refined sugar); some visual pornography | |
| Key stimuli associated with a biologically important type of object are attached to an object of a different type | Visual pornography; teddy bears; artificially sweetened, sugar-free food; Facebook profiles | |
| Misrepresenting situations | Many people cooperate in anonymous, one-shot prisoner’s dilemma games; “developmental mismatch” | |
| Type 4—Misresponse-inducing: responding incorrectly to environmental conditions | Behavioral chains are not integrated | The four main components of hunting behavior in apartment-living cats are not integrated |
| Responses are elicited with different frequencies from those that occurred in evolutionary experience | Among most inhabitants of contemporary Western societies, genuine fear is elicited much less frequently than it was in the relatively violent and dangerous AE |