在采集者讲故事中,显性交际和可概括知识的共存:采集者社会教学的跨文化证据。

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Michelle Scalise Sugiyama
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引用次数: 12

摘要

教学被认为是人类的一种典型行为,有助于积累文化的出现。几项文化内部研究表明,觅食者在很大程度上依赖于社会学习来获得实用技能和知识,但尚不清楚教学是否在觅食者群体中普遍存在。从行为学上讲,教学可以定义为专家在新手面前对行为的修改,这样专家就会付出代价,新手就能更有效地获得技能/知识,否则就无法获得。一种被假设为适应教学的行为改变是明示交际——夸张的韵律和手势,表明意图传递可概括的知识,并指出预期的接收者。根据这一观点,使用明示交际与传播可概括的知识构成教学的证据。口头讲故事似乎符合这些标准:土著人民认为他们的传统是生态和社会知识的重要来源,口头讲故事被广泛报道为使用副语言交流。为了验证这一假设,对采集社会中表演叙事的描述进行了编码,使用14种明示交际行为和可概括知识的存在。虽然偏向于北美,但研究样本包括跨越五大洲的53种觅食文化,34个语系和不同的生物群落。所有的文化都证明了预测的行为。研究结果表明,采集者使用讲故事作为一种教学模式,从而为采集者群体的教学提供了跨文化证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Co-occurrence of Ostensive Communication and Generalizable Knowledge in Forager Storytelling : Cross-Cultural Evidence of Teaching in Forager Societies.

Teaching is hypothesized to be a species-typical behavior in humans that contributed to the emergence of cumulative culture. Several within-culture studies indicate that foragers depend heavily on social learning to acquire practical skills and knowledge, but it is unknown whether teaching is universal across forager populations. Teaching can be defined ethologically as the modification of behavior by an expert in the presence of a novice, such that the expert incurs a cost and the novice acquires skills/knowledge more efficiently or that it would not acquire otherwise. One behavioral modification hypothesized to be an adaptation for teaching is ostensive communication-exaggerations of prosody and gesture that signal intent to transmit generalizable knowledge and indicate the intended receiver. On this view, the use of ostensive communication in conjunction with the transmission of generalizable knowledge constitutes evidence of teaching. Oral storytelling appears to meet these criteria: Indigenous peoples regard their traditions as important sources of ecological and social knowledge, and oral storytelling is widely reported to employ paralinguistic communication. To test this hypothesis, descriptions of performed narrative in forager societies were coded for the use of 14 ostensive-communicative behaviors and the presence of generalizable knowledge. Although biased toward North America, the study sample comprised 53 forager cultures spanning five continents, 34 language families, and diverse biomes. All cultures evinced the predicted behaviors. Results suggest that foragers use storytelling as a mode of instruction, thus providing cross-cultural evidence of teaching in forager populations.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Human Nature is dedicated to advancing the interdisciplinary investigation of the biological, social, and environmental factors that underlie human behavior. It focuses primarily on the functional unity in which these factors are continuously and mutually interactive. These include the evolutionary, biological, and sociological processes as they interact with human social behavior; the biological and demographic consequences of human history; the cross-cultural, cross-species, and historical perspectives on human behavior; and the relevance of a biosocial perspective to scientific, social, and policy issues.
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