Beyond existence and aiming outside the laboratory: estimating frequency-dependent and pay-off-biased social learning strategies
- 17 September 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 363 (1509) , 3515-3528
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2008.0131
Abstract
The existence of social learning has been confirmed in diverse taxa, from apes to guppies. In order to advance our understanding of the consequences of social transmission and evolution of behaviour, however, we require statistical tools that can distinguish among diverse social learning strategies. In this paper, we advance two main ideas. First, social learning is diverse, in the sense that individuals can take advantage of different kinds of information and combine them in different ways. Examining learning strategies for different information conditions illuminates the more detailed design of social learning. We construct and analyse an evolutionary model of diverse social learning heuristics, in order to generate predictions and illustrate the impact of design differences on an organism's fitness. Second, in order to eventually escape the laboratory and apply social learning models to natural behaviour, we require statistical methods that do not depend upon tight experimental control. Therefore, we examine strategic social learning in an experimental setting in which the social information itself is endogenous to the experimental group, as it is in natural settings. We develop statistical models for distinguishing among different strategic uses of social information. The experimental data strongly suggest that most participants employ a hierarchical strategy that uses both average observed pay-offs of options as well as frequency information, the same model predicted by our evolutionary analysis to dominate a wide range of conditions.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Learning, productivity, and noise: an experimental study of cultural transmission on the Bolivian AltiplanoEvolution and Human Behavior, 2006
- Causal knowledge and imitation/emulation switching in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and children (Homo sapiens)Animal Cognition, 2004
- Cultural evolution in laboratory microsocieties including traditions of rule giving and rule followingPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Model selection in ecology and evolutionTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 2004
- Social Learning and Coordination Conventions in Intergenerational Games: An Experimental StudyJournal of Political Economy, 2003
- Group Beneficial Norms Can Spread Rapidly in a Structured PopulationJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2002
- Which one should I imitate?Published by Elsevier ,1999
- The earth is round (p < .05).American Psychologist, 1994
- Opinion leaders, independence, and Condorcet's Jury TheoremTheory and Decision, 1994
- A new look at the statistical model identificationIEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 1974