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An interdisciplinary research collaborative
investigating the pasts, presents, and futures of
forager & mixed-subsistence children's lives
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New paper out from Elena Miu, Marc Malmdorf Andersen, Felix Riede, and FCS Director Sheina Lew-Levy in Proceedings B. In this paper, the authors show through formal modeling that childhood exploration leads to longer term payoffs at the population level.


Abstract: The societal effects of children’s learning in cultural evolution have been underexplored. Here, we investigate using agent-based models how a propensity for early exploration in childhood contributes to cultural adaptation and the evolution of long human childhood. Using a complex cultural task, we implemented a two-stage strategy for exploring this space—children explore broadly, and are more likely to learn new behaviours, while adults exploit behaviours already known, incrementally improving them. We found that populations that followed this two-stage strategy achieved higher payoffs in the long term than populations using the two exploration strategies in a random order. Our models point at a ‘just right’ length of childhood—neither too long, nor too short—allowing individuals enough time to explore before exploiting what they learned. Social learning increased payoffs when agents could copy individuals of a variety of ages, but reduced the benefit of early exploration. Payoffs decreased under environmental change, especially for long childhoods, because adults did not have enough time to recover between bouts of change.





We're pleased to (somewhat belatedly) share that Sheina Lew-Levy is the recipient of an ERC Starting Grant, titled "Children as agents of cultural evolution". Along with FCS Director Dorsa Amir, FCS Research Affiliate Zach Garfield, and collaborators Benjamin Pitt and Luke Glowacki, this grant aims to understand the role of children in cultural evolution. The investigation will span three years and focus on formal modeling, quantitative experiments, and ethnographic observations of children's peer cultures in Toledo (Belize), Likouala (Republic of the Congo), the Omo Valley (Ethiopia), and County Durham (UK). They will shortly be expanding the team, with three PhD studentships based in Durham University.

FCS member Sheina Lew-Levy, in collaboration with Felix Riede, Marc Malmdorf Andersen, and Ulrik Høj Johnsen are thrilled to share a new database for research use: Play Object Play, a database of toys and tools made for and/or used by children from subsistence societies.



Material culture is at the heart of human identity and ingenuity. The breadth and complexity of our toolkits have allowed us to adapt to diverse and challenging ecologies throughout our evolutionary history. By investigating the processes by which technology is modified and transmitted across generations, we are uniquely poised to inform how we may harness our species’ innovative potential to thrive in the face of unprecedented environmental change. Play|Object|Play (P|O|P) aims to bring object play and, crucially, play objects in focus. The project seeks to develop an integrative child-centred model of material culture change, drawing on emerging psychological and anthropological understandings of the cognitive and cultural processes by which children develop their tool making skill. The open-access and user-driven cross-cultural database of play objects from ethnographic and ethno-historic contexts is a key research tool in this endeavour.

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