Agent-based model experiments cast doubt on Dunnell’s adaptive waste explanation for cultural elaboration

W. Carleton, B. McCauley, A. Costopoulos, M. Collard
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Ancient monuments are puzzling from an evolutionary perspective. It is obvious that their construction would have been costly in terms of energy, but it is not clear how they would have enhanced reproductive success. In the late 1980s, Robert Dunnell proposed a solution to this conundrum. He argued that wasting energy on monuments and other forms of what he called “cultural elaboration” was adaptive in highly variable environments. Here, we report a study in which we used an agent-based model to test Dunnell’s hypothesis. We found that the propensity to waste was subject to strong negative selection regardless of the level of environmental variability. At the start of the simulation runs, agents wasted ca. 50% of the time but selection rapidly drove that rate down, ultimately settling at ca. 5–7%. This casts doubt on the ability of Dunnell’s hypothesis to explain instances of cultural elaboration in the archaeological record.
基于主体的模型实验对Dunnell关于文化阐述的适应性浪费解释提出了质疑
从进化的角度来看,古代纪念碑令人费解。很明显,就能源而言,它们的建造将是昂贵的,但它们如何提高繁殖成功率尚不清楚。20世纪80年代末,罗伯特·邓奈尔(Robert Dunnell)提出了一个解决这个难题的方法。他认为,把精力浪费在纪念碑和其他形式的他所谓的“文化精致”上,在高度多变的环境中是适应性的。在这里,我们报告了一项研究,我们使用基于主体的模型来检验Dunnell的假设。我们发现,无论环境可变性水平如何,浪费倾向都受到强烈的负选择的影响。在模拟运行开始时,代理浪费了大约50%的时间,但选择迅速降低了这一比率,最终稳定在大约5-7%。这就使人们对邓奈尔的假说能否解释考古记录中文化精细化的实例产生了怀疑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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