Revisiting the Effect of Population Size on Cumulative Cultural Evolution

Author:

Baldini Ryan1

Affiliation:

1. UC DavisUSAOne Shields Avenue, Davis, ca 95616

Abstract

Previous models of cultural evolution found that larger populations can better maintain complex technologies because they contain more highly skilled people whom others can imitate. These models, however, do not distinguish the effects of population size from population density or network size; a learner’s social network includes the entire population. Does population size remain important when populations are subdivided and networks are realistically small? I use a mathematical model to show that population size has little effect on equilibrium levels of mean skill under a wide range of conditions. The effects of network size and transmission error rate usually overshadow that of population size. Population size can, however, affect the rate at which a population approaches equilibrium, by increasing the rate at which innovations arise. This effect is small unless innovation is very rare. Population size should predict technological complexity in the real world, then, only if technological evolution is a slow, innovation-limited process. Population density and “connectedness” have similar affects to population size, though density can also affect equilibrium skill. I discuss the results of this analysis in light of the current empirical debate.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

Reference31 articles.

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1. Innovation rate and population structure moderate the effect of population size on cumulative technological culture;Humanities and Social Sciences Communications;2024-05-21

2. Innovation-facilitating networks create inequality;Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-11-22

3. Effective population size for culturally evolving traits;PLOS Computational Biology;2022-04-08

4. Effective population size for culturally evolving traits;2021-09-10

5. The speakers of minority languages are more multilingual;International Journal of Bilingualism;2021-06-23

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