Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 23, Issue 5 , Pages 373-393, September 2002

Cost–benefit analysis of social/cultural learning in a nonstationary uncertain environment:

An evolutionary simulation and an experiment with human subjects

Department of Behavioral Science, Hokkaido University, Bungakubu, N10 W7, Kita-ku, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan

Received 14 January 2002; accepted 10 April 2002.

Abstract 

Social/cultural learning is an effective way to reduce uncertainty about the environment, helping individuals adopt an adaptive behavior cheaply. Although this is evident for learning about temporally stable targets, such as acquisition of a skill in avoiding toxic foods, the utility of social/cultural learning in a temporally unstable environment is less clear, since knowledge acquired by social learning may be outdated. This paper addresses the adaptive value of social/cultural learning in a nonstationary environment both theoretically and empirically. We first conducted an evolutionary computer simulation that extended Henrich and Boyd's [Evol. Hum. Behav. 19 (1998) 215.] model of cultural transmission, with the following results. When individual learning about the nonstationary environment is costly, a mixed equilibrium emerges in the population, where members who engage in costly individual learning and members who skip the information search and free-ride on other members' search efforts coexist at a stable ratio. Such a “producer–scrounger” structure qualifies effectiveness of social/cultural learning severely, especially “conformity bias” when using social information. We then tested these propositions by an experiment implementing a nonstationary uncertain environment in a laboratory. The results supported our thesis. Implications of these findings and some future directions are discussed.

Keywords:  Social learning, Cultural transmission, Conformity, Nonstationary environment, Producer–scrounger equilibrium

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PII: S1090-5138(02)00101-0

Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 23, Issue 5 , Pages 373-393, September 2002