757 research outputs found

    An intraspecific appraisal of the social intelligence hypothesis

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    This is the final version. Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this recordData accessibility: This article has no additional dataThe prevailing hypotheses for the evolution of cognition focus on either the demands associated with group living (the social intelligence hypothesis (SIH)) or ecological challenges such as finding food. Comparative studies testing these hypotheses have generated highly conflicting results; consequently, our understanding of the drivers of cognitive evolution remains limited. To understand how selection shapes cognition, research must incorporate an intraspecific approach, focusing on the causes and consequences of individual variation in cognition. Here, we review the findings of recent intraspecific cognitive research to investigate the predictions of the SIH. Extensive evidence from our own research on Australian magpies (Cracticus tibicen dorsalis), and a number of other taxa, suggests that individuals in larger social groups exhibit elevated cognitive performance and, in some cases, elevated reproductive fitness. Not only do these findings demonstrate how the social environment has the potential to shape cognitive evolution, but crucially, they demonstrate the importance of considering both genetic and developmental factors when attempting to explain the causes of cognitive variation. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Causes and consequences of individual differences in cognitive abilities’.Australian Research CouncilBiotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)Human Frontiers Research Progra

    Smarter through group living: A response to Smulders

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via the DOI in this recordWe recently identified a strong, positive relationship between group size and individual cognitive performance, and a strong, positive relationship between female cognitive performance and reproductive success (Ashton, Ridley, Edwards, & Thornton in Nature, 554, 364–367, 2018). An opinion piece by Smulders (Learning & Behavior, https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-018-0335-0, 2018) raised the interesting notion that these patterns may be underlined by motivational factors. In this commentary, we highlight why none of the available data are consistent with this explanation, but instead support the argument that the demands of group living influence cognitive development, with knock-on consequences for fitness

    Twenty-One Years of the CRC: A Coming of Age

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    In 2010, the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) reached the age of 21 and, arguably, "came of age". The CRC was not, however, the first international instrument that attempted to protect the rights of the child: 1924 saw the enactment of one of the first legal instruments to explicitly recognise that children, as human persons, ought to enjoy certain inalienable rights. It was recognised that children are often the first and most severely affected in times of conflict or economic hardship. The 1924 Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child outlined the duty of all nations, and indeed individuals within states, to protect weak, marginalised, or impoverished children.3 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights further highlighted the need to protect the rights of the child re: special care and assistance"

    Frequency Domain Estimation of Continuous Time Cointegrated Models with Mixed Frequency and Mixed Sample Data

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    Recent work by the author on mixed frequency data analysis has focused on the estimation of cointegrated systems in continuous time based on a fully specified dynamic system of equations, while the estimation of cointegrating vectors in a discrete time system has been approached using a semiparametric frequency domain estimator. We extend the latter approach to cover the continuous time case, establishing the asymptotic properties of the frequency domain estimator and explore, in a simulation study, the effects of misspecifying the continuous time dynamic model in discrete time compared to treating the dynamics non‐parametrically. An empirical illustration is also provided
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