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Cultural diffusion in humans and other animals

Abstract

This is the author's post print version of an article published in definitive form in Current Opinion in Psychology, Volume 8, April 2016, Pages 15–21.The definitive published version is available from: doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.09.002Available online 14 September 2015Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd.Recent years have seen an enormous expansion and progress in studies of the cultural diffusion processes through which behaviour patterns, ideas and artifacts are transmitted within and between generations of humans and other animals. The first of two main approaches focuses on identifying, tracing and understanding cultural diffusion as it naturally occurs, an essential foundation to any science of culture. This endeavor has been enriched in recent years by sophisticated statistical methods and surprising new discoveries particularly in humans, other primates and cetaceans. This work has been complemented by a growing corpus of powerful, purpose-designed cultural diffusion experiments with captive and natural populations that have facilitated the rigorous identification and analysis of cultural diffusion in species from insects to humans.John Templeton Foundatio

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