Runaway cultural niche construction
- 27 March 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 366 (1566) , 823-835
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2010.0256
Abstract
Cultural niche construction is a uniquely potent source of selection on human populations, and a major cause of recent human evolution. Previous theoretical analyses have not, however, explored the local effects of cultural niche construction. Here, we use spatially explicit coevolutionary models to investigate how cultural processes could drive selection on human genes by modifying local resources. We show that cultural learning, expressed in local niche construction, can trigger a process with dynamics that resemble runaway sexual selection. Under a broad range of conditions, cultural niche-constructing practices generate selection for gene-based traits and hitchhike to fixation through the build up of statistical associations between practice and trait. This process can occur even when the cultural practice is costly, or is subject to counteracting transmission biases, or the genetic trait is selected against. Under some conditions a secondary hitchhiking occurs, through which genetic variants that enhance the capability for cultural learning are also favoured by similar dynamics. We suggest that runaway cultural niche construction could have played an important role in human evolution, helping to explain why humans are simultaneously the species with the largest relative brain size, the most potent capacity for niche construction and the greatest reliance on culture.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evolution of lactase persistence: an example of human niche constructionPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2011
- Evolution of culture-dependent discriminate sociality: a gene–culture coevolutionary modelPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2011
- Human uniqueness: genome interactions with environment, behaviour and cultureNature Reviews Genetics, 2008
- Recent acceleration of human adaptive evolutionProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Recent and ongoing selection in the human genomeNature Reviews Genetics, 2007
- Genome-wide detection and characterization of positive selection in human populationsNature, 2007
- Diet and the evolution of human amylase gene copy number variationNature Genetics, 2007
- Culturally transmitted paternity beliefs and the evolution of human mating behaviourProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2007
- Absence of the lactase-persistence-associated allele in early Neolithic EuropeansProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Convergent adaptation of human lactase persistence in Africa and EuropeNature Genetics, 2006