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4.5 Horizontal and oblique transmission

  • Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza and Marcus W. Feldman
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Cultural Transmission and Evolution
This chapter is in the book Cultural Transmission and Evolution
© 2020 Princeton University Press, Princeton

© 2020 Princeton University Press, Princeton

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Preface v
  3. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS vii
  4. List of Symbols ix
  5. Contents xi
  6. 1. Introduction
  7. 1.1 Man as a cultural animal 1
  8. 1.2 The adaptiveness of behavior 4
  9. 1.3 Levels of learning 6
  10. 1.4 Innate and learned traits 7
  11. 1.5 Culture as the object of evolution 10
  12. 1.6 The measurement of selection in biology 11
  13. 1.7 Two levels of selection and two orders of organisms 14
  14. 1.8 Some examples from the evolution of languages 19
  15. 1.9 The diffusion of innovations 29
  16. 1.10 Epidemics 46
  17. 1.11 Cultural transmission 53
  18. 1.12 Transmission as a two-stage process 62
  19. 1.13 A summary of evolutionary factors in culture 65
  20. 1.14 Some caveats and problems 69
  21. 2. Vertical Transmission
  22. 2.1 Introduction 77
  23. 2.2 Vertical transmission 78
  24. 2.3 Special cases of vertical transmission 84
  25. 2.4 Correlations between relatives 91
  26. 2.5 Assortative mating 95
  27. 2.6 Natural selection 101
  28. 2.7 Mutation 107
  29. 2.8 Random-sampling drift 109
  30. 2.9 Drift and natural selection 121
  31. 2.10 Concluding remarks on vertical transmission 124
  32. 3. Oblique and Horizontal Transmission
  33. 3.1 Oblique transmission 130
  34. 3.2 Oblique and vertical transmission with natural selection 133
  35. 3.3 Sex-influenced transmission 143
  36. 3.4 Horizontal transmission 151
  37. 3.5 Sib-sib interactions 154
  38. 3.6 Migration between populations 157
  39. 3.7 Migration dependent on extent of separation 173
  40. 3.8 Population stratification 177
  41. 3.9 The recent demographic transition as an example of stratified, vertical and oblique or horizontal transmission in cultural change 180
  42. 3.10 Random sampling drift: Vertical and oblique transmission 189
  43. 3.11 A comparison of special schemes of transmission with random sampling drift: parents versus teachers 192
  44. 3.12 Kinetics of cultural change with oblique and horizontal transmission 202
  45. 3.13 Variation among populations 204
  46. 3.14 Correlation of cultural and biological variation 216
  47. 4. Multiple State Traits
  48. 4.1 Mendelian transmission as an example of a multiple state trait 219
  49. 4.2 Vertical transmission for three-state models 222
  50. 4.3 Numerical examples of multistate transmission 238
  51. 4.4 Assortative mating 245
  52. 4.5 Horizontal and oblique transmission 251
  53. 4.6 The evolution of surnames: An example of drift in multistate cultural transmission 255
  54. 5. Cultural Transmission for a Continuous Trait
  55. 5.1 Historical considerations on "blending" inheritance 267
  56. 5.2 Linear transmission 275
  57. 5.3 Correlations between relatives 279
  58. 5.4 Multivariate linear models 286
  59. 5.5 Social stratification, class, and caste 293
  60. 5.6 Natural selection, range attenuation, and their effects on the correlations between relatives 300
  61. 5.7 Mutation and cultural drift for continuous traits 307
  62. 5.8 Upper limits to individual variation under cultural drift 314
  63. 5.9 Variation between groups 317
  64. 5.10 Cultural selection versus cultural drift 319
  65. 5.11 Simple social hierarchies and compartments 332
  66. 5.12 Transmission matrices as models of vertical and oblique transmission: Teachers vs. parents 334
  67. 6. Epilogue
  68. 6.1 General considerations 340
  69. 6.2 Harmony and conflict of cultural and natural selection 342
  70. 6.3 Cultural transmission, communication, and cultural selection 346
  71. 6.4 Modes of transmission and their consequences for rates and equilibria under cultural evolution 351
  72. 6.5 Chance and purpose in cultural variation 357
  73. 6.6 Overlaps with other areas of study 359
  74. 6.7 Individual selection and group selection 361
  75. 6.8 Cultural activity as an extension of Darwinian fitness 362
  76. Bibliography 367
  77. Index 383
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