Projects per year
Abstract
The experimental study of cumulative culture and the innovations essential to it is a young science, with child studies so rare that the scope of cumulative cultural capacities in childhood remains largely unknown. Here we report a new experimental approach to the inherent complexity of these phenomena. Groups of 3–4-year-old children were presented with an elaborate array of challenges affording the potential cumulative development of a variety of techniques to gain increasingly attractive rewards. In contrast to a prior study, we found evidence for elementary forms of cumulative cultural progress, with inventions of solutions at lower levels spreading to become shared innovations, and some children then building on these to create more advanced but more rewarding innovations. This contrasted with markedly more constrained progress when children worked only by themselves, or if groups faced only the highest-level challenges from the start. Further experiments that introduced higher-level inventions via the inclusion of older children, or that created ecological change, with the easiest habitual solutions no longer possible, encouraged higher levels of cumulative innovation. Our results show children are not merely ‘cultural sponges’, but when acting in groups, display the beginnings of cycles of innovation and observational learning that sustain cumulative progress in problem solving. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Process and pattern in innovations from cells to societies’.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 20160425 |
Number of pages | 14 |
Journal | Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. B, Biological Sciences |
Volume | 372 |
Issue number | 1735 |
Early online date | 23 Oct 2017 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 5 Dec 2017 |
Keywords
- Cultural evolution
- Culture
- Cumulative culture
- Innovation
- Social learning
- Tool use
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Dive into the research topics of 'Innovation and social transmission in experimental micro-societies: exploring the scope of cumulative culture in young children'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Exploring the Evolutionary Foundations: Exploring the Evolutionary Foundations of Cultural Complexity Creativity and Trust
Whiten, A. (PI)
1/09/13 → 30/05/16
Project: Standard
Datasets
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Supplementary material from "Innovation and social transmission in experimental micro-societies: exploring the scope of cumulative culture in young children"
McGuigan, N. (Creator), Burdett, E. (Creator), Burgess, V. (Creator), Vale, G. (Creator) & Whiten, D. A. (Creator), Figshare, 1 Nov 2017
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3887878.v2
Dataset