| Literature DB >> 29912882 |
Eva Reindl1,2, Claudio Tennie3.
Abstract
The ratchet effect-the gradual accumulation of changes within a cultural trait beyond a level that individuals can achieve on their own-arguably rests on two key cognitive abilities: high-fidelity social learning and innovation. Researchers have started to simulate the ratchet effect in the laboratory to identify its underlying social learning mechanisms, but studies on the developmental origins of the ratchet effect remain sparse. We used the transmission chain method and a tower construction task that had previously been used with adults to investigate whether "generations" of children between 4 and 6 years were able to make a technological product that individual children could not yet achieve. 21 children in a baseline and 80 children in transmission chains (each consisting of 10 successive children) were asked to build something as tall as possible from plasticine and sticks. Children in the chains were presented with the constructions of the two preceding generations (endstate demonstration). Results showed that tower heights did not increase across the chains nor were they different from the height of baseline towers, demonstrating a lack of improvement in tower height. However, we found evidence for cultural lineages, i.e., construction styles: towers within chains were more similar to each other than to towers from different chains. Possible explanations for the findings and directions for future research are suggested.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29912882 PMCID: PMC6005566 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197828
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Shapes and heights in “stick levels” of the constructions made in the baseline and the transmission chains.
| Number of constructions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tower height in sticks | Tower shape | Shape description | Baseline | Transmission chains |
| Level 4 | Level-4-2-leg-tower | Level-4-tower with 2 legs | - | 1 |
| Level-4-tower | 4 sticks combined vertically on top of each other (at least 1 stick per level) | - | 1 | |
| Level 4 Total | - | 2/80 (2.5%) | ||
| Level 3 | Elevated level-3-tower | As level-3-tower, but with increased plasticine base | - | 1 |
| Level-3-tower | 3 sticks combined vertically on top of each other (at least 1 stick per level) | - | 3 | |
| Level 3 Total | - | 4/80 (5%) | ||
| Level 2 | Modified Level-2-tripod | 4 or more legs at the base, combined with piece of plasticine at the top, on top of this 1 or more vertical sticks | - | 2 |
| Level-2-3-leg-tower | Level-2-tower with 3 legs arranged in a line | 1 | - | |
| Level-2-2-leg-tower | Level-2-tower with 2 legs | - | 6 | |
| Level-2-tower | 2 sticks combined vertically on top of each other (at least 1 stick per level) | 4 | 15 | |
| Other level-2-constructions | 1 | 3 | ||
| Level 2 Total | 6/21 (28.6%) | 26/80 (32.5%) | ||
| Level 1 | Broken level-3-tower | Level-3-tower that broke down to level-1-height | - | 1 |
| Level-1-tower with 2 legs | 2 sticks with plasticine base combined with plasticine at the top | - | 1 | |
| Level-1-tower with plasticine cap | As level-1-tower, but with pieces of plasticine on top of 1 or more sticks | - | 1 | |
| Elevated level-1-tower | As level-1-tower, but with increased plasticine base | 2 | ||
| Level-1-tower | At least 1 ball of plasticine with at least 1 vertical stick on top | 2 | 14 | |
| Hedgehog | Ball of plasticine from which several sticks protrude upward and/or to side | 5 | 21 | |
| Level 1 Total | 9/21 (42.8%) | 38/80 (47.5%) | ||
| Level 0 | Level-0-tower | Construction involving sticks and plasticine, smaller than height of 1 stick | - | 3 |
| Plasticine-only tower | Construction made from plasticine only | 5 | 2 | |
| Fallen tower | Tower of any height that didn't stand on its own | 1 | 5 | |
| Level 0 Total | 6/21 (28.6%) | 10/80 (12.5%) | ||
Fig 1Tower height across the ten positions of the eight transmission chains.
Fig 2Pictures of towers in the transmission chains (girls).
The red sticky dots on the towers were added after the experiment to facilitate telling approximate tower height from the pictures. Starting from the bottom of the construction and going up, we attached one dot at every 5cm.
Fig 3Pictures of towers in the transmission chains (boys).