Cross-cultural forager myth transmission rules: Implications for the emergence of cumulative culture

IF 3 1区 心理学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Michelle Scalise Sugiyama, Kieran J. Reilly
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

For most of human evolution, accumulated cultural knowledge has been stored in memory and transmitted orally. This presents a daunting information management problem: how to store and transmit this knowledge in a portable format that resists corruption. One solution–widespread among foragers–is to encode knowledge in narrative. However, this strategy depends on accurate performance of the story. Significantly, some forager cultures have rules regulating myth performance, although the extent of this phenomenon is unknown. We hypothesize that these rules subserve high-fidelity transmission across generations. Accordingly, we predicted that, across forager cultures, myth-telling rules will mandate: (P1) transmission by the most proficient storytellers (P2) under low-distraction conditions with (P3) multiple individuals and (P4) multiple generations present, and the application of measures that (P5) prevent, identify, and/or correct errors, (P6) maintain audience attention, (P7) discourage rule violations and/or (P8) incentivize rule compliance. To test these predictions, we searched the forager ethnographic record for descriptions of myth performance, and coded them for prescriptions/proscriptions regarding narrator age, performance context, audience composition, narrative delivery, and audience comportment, as well as sanctions associated with rule transgression or compliance. Results indicate that rules regulating myth performance are widespread across forager cultures, and are characterized by features that reduce the likelihood of copy errors. These findings help elucidate the role that anthropogenic ratchets played in the emergence of cumulative culture.

跨文化觅食者神话的传播规律:对累积文化出现的启示
在人类进化的大部分时间里,积累的文化知识都储存在记忆中,并以口头方式传播。这就提出了一个令人生畏的信息管理问题:如何以可移植的格式存储和传播这些知识,并防止其损坏。一种在觅食者中广泛使用的解决方案是将知识编码成叙事。然而,这种策略取决于故事的准确性。值得注意的是,一些觅食者文化有规范神话表演的规则,尽管这种现象的程度尚不清楚。我们假设,这些规则有助于高保真的跨代传播。因此,我们预测,在不同的狩猎文化中,神话讲述规则将规定:(P1)在(P3)多人和(P4)多代在场的低分心条件下,由最熟练的讲故事者(P2)进行传播,并采取(P5)防止、识别和/或纠正错误,(P6)保持听众注意力,(P7)阻止违反规则和/或(P8)激励遵守规则的措施。为了验证这些预测,我们搜索了觅食者人种学记录中有关神话表演的描述,并对其进行编码,以确定有关叙述者年龄、表演背景、观众构成、叙述方式和观众举止的规定/规定,以及与违反或遵守规则相关的惩罚措施。结果表明,规范神话表演的规则在狩猎者文化中普遍存在,其特点是减少复制错误的可能性。这些发现有助于阐明人类活动在累积文化出现过程中所扮演的角色。
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来源期刊
Evolution and Human Behavior
Evolution and Human Behavior 生物-行为科学
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
9.80%
发文量
62
审稿时长
82 days
期刊介绍: Evolution and Human Behavior is an interdisciplinary journal, presenting research reports and theory in which evolutionary perspectives are brought to bear on the study of human behavior. It is primarily a scientific journal, but submissions from scholars in the humanities are also encouraged. Papers reporting on theoretical and empirical work on other species will be welcome if their relevance to the human animal is apparent.
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