The evolution of similarity-biased social learning.

IF 2.2 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Evolutionary Human Sciences Pub Date : 2025-01-20 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1017/ehs.2024.46
Paul E Smaldino, Alejandro Pérez Velilla
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Abstract

Humans often learn preferentially from ingroup members who share a social identity affiliation, while ignoring or rejecting information when it comes from someone perceived to be from an outgroup. This sort of bias has well-known negative consequences - exacerbating cultural divides, polarization, and conflict - while reducing the information available to learners. Why does it persist? Using evolutionary simulations, we demonstrate that similarity-biased social learning (also called parochial social learning) is adaptive when (1) individual learning is error-prone and (2) sufficient diversity inhibits the efficacy of social learning that ignores identity signals, as long as (3) those signals are sufficiently reliable indicators of adaptive behaviour. We further show that our results are robust to considerations of other social learning strategies, focusing on conformist and pay-off-biased transmission. We conclude by discussing the consequences of our analyses for understanding diversity in the modern world.

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相似性偏向社会学习的进化。
人类通常会优先从拥有相同社会身份归属的内部群体成员那里学习,而忽略或拒绝来自外部群体的信息。这种偏见有众所周知的负面影响——加剧了文化鸿沟、两极分化和冲突——同时减少了学习者可获得的信息。为什么它会持续存在?通过进化模拟,我们证明,当(1)个人学习容易出错,(2)足够的多样性抑制忽视身份信号的社会学习的有效性,只要(3)这些信号是适应行为的足够可靠的指标时,相似性偏见社会学习(也称为狭隘社会学习)是自适应的。我们进一步表明,我们的结果对其他社会学习策略的考虑是稳健的,重点是顺从和回报偏见传播。最后,我们讨论了我们的分析对理解现代世界多样性的影响。
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来源期刊
Evolutionary Human Sciences
Evolutionary Human Sciences Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
11.50%
发文量
49
审稿时长
10 weeks
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