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      The pervasive role of social learning in primate lifetime development

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          Abstract

          In recent decades, an accelerating research effort has exploited a substantial diversity of methodologies to garner mounting evidence for social learning and culture in many species of primate. As in humans, the evidence suggests that the juvenile phases of non-human primates’ lives represent a period of particular intensity in adaptive learning from others, yet the relevant research remains scattered in the literature. Accordingly, we here offer what we believe to be the first substantial collation and review of this body of work and its implications for the lifetime behavioral ecology of primates. We divide our analysis into three main phases: a first phase of learning focused on primary attachment figures, typically the mother; a second phase of selective learning from a widening array of group members, including some with expertise that the primary figures may lack; and a third phase following later dispersal, when a migrant individual encounters new ecological and social circumstances about which the existing residents possess expertise that can be learned from. Collating a diversity of discoveries about this lifetime process leads us to conclude that social learning pervades primate ontogenetic development, importantly shaping locally adaptive knowledge and skills that span multiple aspects of the behavioral repertoire.

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          Social learning strategies.

          In most studies of social learning in animals, no attempt has been made to examine the nature of the strategy adopted by animals when they copy others. Researchers have expended considerable effort in exploring the psychological processes that underlie social learning and amassed extensive data banks recording purported social learning in the field, but the contexts under which animals copy others remain unexplored. Yet, theoretical models used to investigate the adaptive advantages of social learning lead to the conclusion that social learning cannot be indiscriminate and that individuals should adopt strategies that dictate the circumstances under which they copy others and from whom they learn. In this article, I discuss a number of possible strategies that are predicted by theoretical analyses, including copy when uncertain, copy the majority, and copy if better, and consider the empirical evidence in support of each, drawing from both the animal and human social learning literature. Reliance on social learning strategies may be organized hierarchically, their being employed by animals when unlearned and asocially learned strategies prove ineffective but before animals take recourse in innovation.
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            Cultural learning

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              Ratcheting up the ratchet: on the evolution of cumulative culture.

              Some researchers have claimed that chimpanzee and human culture rest on homologous cognitive and learning mechanisms. While clearly there are some homologous mechanisms, we argue here that there are some different mechanisms at work as well. Chimpanzee cultural traditions represent behavioural biases of different populations, all within the species' existing cognitive repertoire (what we call the 'zone of latent solutions') that are generated by founder effects, individual learning and mostly product-oriented (rather than process-oriented) copying. Human culture, in contrast, has the distinctive characteristic that it accumulates modifications over time (what we call the 'ratchet effect'). This difference results from the facts that (i) human social learning is more oriented towards process than product and (ii) unique forms of human cooperation lead to active teaching, social motivations for conformity and normative sanctions against non-conformity. Together, these unique processes of social learning and cooperation lead to humans' unique form of cumulative cultural evolution.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                44 1334 462073 , aw2@st-andrews.ac.uk
                Journal
                Behav Ecol Sociobiol
                Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. (Print)
                Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
                Springer Berlin Heidelberg (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0340-5443
                3 May 2018
                3 May 2018
                2018
                : 72
                : 5
                : 80
                Affiliations
                [1 ]ISNI 0000 0001 0721 1626, GRID grid.11914.3c, Centre for Social Learning and Cognitive Evolution, and Scottish Primate Research Group, School of Psychology and Neuroscience, , University of St Andrews, ; St Andrews, KY16 9JP UK
                [2 ]ISNI 0000 0001 2165 4204, GRID grid.9851.5, Department of Ecology and Evolution, , University of Lausanne, ; 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
                Author notes

                Communicated by F. Amici

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2426-5890
                Article
                2489
                10.1007/s00265-018-2489-3
                5934467
                29755181
                a1ce6c8b-6541-4581-8bc9-e91edf71600c
                © The Author(s) 2018

                Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

                History
                : 11 December 2017
                : 22 March 2018
                : 29 March 2018
                Funding
                Funded by: FundRef http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001711, Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung;
                Award ID: PP03P3_170624
                Categories
                Review
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2018

                Ecology
                social learning,traditions,culture,ontogeny,development,juvenile primates
                Ecology
                social learning, traditions, culture, ontogeny, development, juvenile primates

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