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When natural selection favors imitation of parents (2008)

Abstract
It is commonly assumed that parents are important sources of socially learned behavior and beliefs. However, the empirical evidence that parents are cultural models is ambiguous, and debates continue over their importance. A formal theory that examines the evolution of psychological tendencies to imitate parents (vertical transmission) and to imitate nonparent adults (oblique transmission) in stochastic fluctuating environments points to forces that sometimes make vertical transmission adaptive, but oblique transmission recovers more quickly from rapid environmental change.. Journal Article

Publication details
Download http://content.lib.utah.edu/u?/ir-main,22729
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Contributors Anthropology, College of Social & Behavioral Science, University of Utah
Repository University of Utah, J.W. Marriott Library CONTENTdm OAI Server (United States)
Keywords Transmission; Evolution; Culture
Type Text
Language eng
Relation McElreath, R., & Strimling, P. (2008). When natural selection favors imitation of parents. Current Anthropology, 49(2), 307-16.