49 results on '"Fiona M. Jordan"'
Search Results
2. DOSSIER 'NEW PERSPECTIVES ON KINSHIP TERMINOLOGY IN TUPIAN AND CARIBAN LANGUAGES'
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Joshua Birchall and Fiona M. Jordan
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Latin America. Spanish America ,F1201-3799 ,Social Sciences - Published
- 2019
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3. Nota sobre o sistema de parentesco em Proto-Tupí-Guaraní
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Joshua Birchall, Luis Henrique OliveiraI, and Fiona M. Jordan
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Parentesco ,Etnologia indígena ,Linguística histórica ,Filogenética computacional ,Tupí-Guaraní ,Latin America. Spanish America ,F1201-3799 ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Resumo Este estudo explora o sistema de terminologia de parentesco da língua Proto-Tupí-Guaraní (PTG) a partir de uma perspectiva interdisciplinar, que soma contribuições da Etnologia, da Linguística Histórica e dos trabalhos etnográficos realizados com povos Tupí-Guaraní. Fazem-se inferências sobre pré-história cultural utilizando métodos filogenéticos comparativos, um conjunto de ferramentas computacionais para explorar mudanças evolutivas em populações relacionadas, aplicados a um banco de dados de termos de parentesco em 24 línguas Tupí-Guaraní. Discute-se a amostra usada no estudo, os procedimentos de codificação adotados para dados tipológicos e os componentes, valores iniciais e premissas do modelo evolutivo. A análise de reconstrução de estados ancestrais baseada no critério de máxima parcimônia reconstrói vários traços tipológicos do sistema de parentesco do PTG, como: fusão e bifurcação na primeira geração ascendente (+1); distinções na terminologia de irmãos baseadas na idade relativa e no sexo do ego; e equação terminológica entre irmãos e primos paralelos. O estudo avalia o estado atual da reconstrução de formas linguísticas para termos de parentesco em PTG e mapeia estas formas no sistema inferido por análise comparativa. Este estudo de comprovação de conceito demonstra a utilidade de análise filogenética para inferir estruturas de sistemas de parentesco em comunidades linguísticas ancestrais.
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- 2019
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4. Prestige and content biases together shape the cultural transmission of narratives
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Richard E.W. Berl, Alarna N. Samarasinghe, Seán G. Roberts, Fiona M. Jordan, and Michael C. Gavin
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cultural transmission ,prestige ,transmission biases ,cognition ,sociolinguistics ,storytelling ,Human evolution ,GN281-289 ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Abstract
Cultural transmission biases such as prestige are thought to have been a primary driver in shaping the dynamics of human cultural evolution. However, few empirical studies have measured the importance of prestige relative to other effects, such as content biases present within the information being transmitted. Here, we report the findings of an experimental transmission study designed to compare the simultaneous effects of a model using a high- or low-prestige regional accent with the presence of narrative content containing social, survival, emotional, moral, rational, or counterintuitive information in the form of a creation story. Results from multimodel inference reveal that prestige is a significant factor in determining the salience and recall of information, but that several content biases, specifically social, survival, negative emotional, and biological counterintuitive information, are significantly more influential. Further, we find evidence that reliance on prestige cues may serve as a conditional learning strategy when no content cues are available. Our results demonstrate that content biases serve a vital and underappreciated role in cultural transmission and cultural evolution.
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- 2021
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5. Pathways to social inequality
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Hannah J. Haynie, Patrick H. Kavanagh, Fiona M. Jordan, Carol R Ember, Russell D. Gray, Simon J. Greenhill, Kathryn R. Kirby, Geoff Kushnick, Bobbi S. Low, Ty Tuff, Bruno Vilela, Carlos A. Botero, and Michael C. Gavin
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Social inequality ,environmental conditions ,resource intensification ,wealth transmission ,structural equation modelling ,Human evolution ,GN281-289 ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Abstract
Social inequality is ubiquitous in contemporary human societies, and has deleterious social and ecological impacts. However, the factors that shape the emergence and maintenance of inequality remain widely debated. Here we conduct a global analysis of pathways to inequality by comparing 408 non-industrial societies in the anthropological record (described largely between 1860 and 1960) that vary in degree of inequality. We apply structural equation modelling to open-access environmental and ethnographic data and explore two alternative models varying in the links among factors proposed by prior literature, including environmental conditions, resource intensification, wealth transmission, population size and a well-documented form of inequality: social class hierarchies. We found support for a model in which the probability of social class hierarchies is associated directly with increases in population size, the propensity to use intensive agriculture and domesticated large mammals, unigeniture inheritance of real property and hereditary political succession. We suggest that influence of environmental variables on inequality is mediated by measures of resource intensification, which, in turn, may influence inequality directly or indirectly via effects on wealth transmission variables. Overall, we conclude that in our analysis a complex network of effects are associated with social class hierarchies.
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- 2021
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6. Pama–Nyungan grandparent systems change with grandchildren, but not cross-cousin terms or social norms
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Catherine Sheard, Claire Bowern, Rikker Dockum, and Fiona M. Jordan
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Human evolution ,GN281-289 ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Published
- 2021
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7. The Cultural Challenge in Mathematical Cognition
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Sieghard Beller, Andrea Bender, Stephen Chrisomalis, Fiona M. Jordan, Karenleigh A. Overmann, Geoffrey B. Saxe, and Dirk Schlimm
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mathematical cognition ,numerical cognition ,culture ,language ,history ,evolution ,research agenda ,Psychology ,BF1-990 ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
In their recent paper on “Challenges in mathematical cognition”, Alcock and colleagues (Alcock et al. [2016]. Challenges in mathematical cognition: A collaboratively-derived research agenda. Journal of Numerical Cognition, 2, 20-41) defined a research agenda through 26 specific research questions. An important dimension of mathematical cognition almost completely absent from their discussion is the cultural constitution of mathematical cognition. Spanning work from a broad range of disciplines – including anthropology, archaeology, cognitive science, history of science, linguistics, philosophy, and psychology – we argue that for any research agenda on mathematical cognition the cultural dimension is indispensable, and we propose a set of exemplary research questions related to it.
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- 2018
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8. No universals in the cultural evolution of kinship terminology
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Sam Passmore and Fiona M. Jordan
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Kinship ,kinship terminology ,cultural evolution ,phylogenetics ,language evolution ,Human evolution ,GN281-289 ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Abstract
Kinship terminologies are the semantic systems of language that express kinship relations between individuals: in English, ‘aunt’ denotes a parent's sister. Theoretical models of kinship terminology diversity reduce over 10 billion possible organisations to six key types, each of which are hypothesised to be aligned with particular cultural norms of descent, marriage or residence patterns. Often, terminological type is used to infer social patterns in past societies based on these putative relationships between kinship terminologies and social structure, and these associations are staples of ‘Anthropology 101’. However, these relationships have not been scrutinised using modern comparative methods. Here we show that kinship terminologies vertically track language phylogeny in Austronesian, Bantu and Uto-Aztecan, three languages families of different time-depths and environments. We find no unidirectional or universal models of evolution in kinship terminology. Of 18 existing anthropological coevolutionary theories regarding kinship terminology and cultural practices across 176 societies, we find only patchy support, and no evidence for putative universal drivers of evolution in kinship terminologies.
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- 2020
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9. Pama–Nyungan grandparent systems change with grandchildren, but not cross-cousin terms or social norms
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Catherine Sheard, Claire Bowern, Rikker Dockum, and Fiona M. Jordan
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Pama–Nyungan ,phylogenetic comparative methods ,kinship ,grandparents ,cultural evolution ,Human evolution ,GN281-289 ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Abstract
Kinship is a fundamental and universal aspect of the structure of human society. The kinship category of ‘grandparents’ is socially salient, owing to grandparents’ investment in the care of the grandchildren as well as to older generations’ control of wealth and cultural knowledge, but the evolutionary dynamics of grandparent terms has yet to be studied in a phylogenetically explicit context. Here, we present the first phylogenetic comparative study of grandparent terms by investigating 134 languages in Pama–Nyungan, an Australian family of hunter–gatherer languages. We infer that proto-Pama–Nyungan had, with high certainty, four separate terms for grandparents. This state then shifted into either a two-term system that distinguishes the genders of the grandparents or a three-term system that merges the ‘parallel’ grandparents, which could then transition into a different three-term system that merges the ‘cross’ grandparents. We find no support for the co-evolution of these systems with either community marriage organisation or post-marital residence. We find some evidence for the correlation of grandparent and grandchild terms, but no support for the correlation of grandparent and cross-cousin terms, suggesting that grandparents and grandchildren potentially form a single lexical category but that the entire kinship system does not necessarily change synchronously.
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- 2020
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10. Usage frequency and lexical class determine the evolution of kinship terms in Indo-European
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Péter Rácz, Sam Passmore, Catherine Sheard, and Fiona M. Jordan
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cultural evolution ,language change ,kinship systems ,language use ,Science - Abstract
Languages do not replace their vocabularies at an even rate: words endure longer if they are used more frequently. This effect, which has parallels in evolutionary biology, has been demonstrated for the core vocabulary, a set of common, unrelated meanings. The extent to which it replicates in closed lexical classes remains to be seen, and may indicate how general this effect is in language change. Here, we use phylogenetic comparative methods to investigate the history of 10 kinship categories, a type of closed lexical class of content words, across 47 Indo-European languages. We find that their rate of replacement is correlated with their usage frequency, and this relationship is stronger than in the case of the core vocabulary, even though the envelope of variation is comparable across the two cases. We also find that the residual variation in the rate of replacement of kinship terms is related to genealogical distance of referent to kin. We argue that this relationship is the result of social changes and corresponding shifts in the entire semantic class of kinship terms, shifts typically not present in the core vocabulary. Thus, an understanding of the scope and limits of social change is needed to understand changes in kinship systems, and broader context is necessary to model cultural evolution in particular and the process of system change in general.
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- 2019
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11. The global geography of human subsistence
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Michael C. Gavin, Patrick H. Kavanagh, Hannah J. Haynie, Claire Bowern, Carol R. Ember, Russell D. Gray, Fiona M. Jordan, Kathryn R. Kirby, Geoff Kushnick, Bobbi S. Low, Bruno Vilela, and Carlos A. Botero
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agriculture ,animal husbandry ,biogeography ,foraging ,subsistence ,Science - Abstract
How humans obtain food has dramatically reshaped ecosystems and altered both the trajectory of human history and the characteristics of human societies. Our species' subsistence varies widely, from predominantly foraging strategies, to plant-based agriculture and animal husbandry. The extent to which environmental, social and historical factors have driven such variation is currently unclear. Prior attempts to resolve long-standing debates on this topic have been hampered by an over-reliance on narrative arguments, small and geographically narrow samples, and by contradictory findings. Here we overcome these methodological limitations by applying multi-model inference tools developed in biogeography to a global dataset (818 societies). Although some have argued that unique conditions and events determine each society's particular subsistence strategy, we find strong support for a general global pattern in which a limited set of environmental, social and historical factors predicts an essential characteristic of all human groups: how we obtain our food.
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- 2018
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12. A Bayesian phylogenetic study of the Dravidian language family
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Vishnupriya Kolipakam, Fiona M. Jordan, Michael Dunn, Simon J. Greenhill, Remco Bouckaert, Russell D. Gray, and Annemarie Verkerk
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dravidian ,bayesian phylogenetic inference ,beast 2 ,dating ,language phylogeny ,Science - Abstract
The Dravidian language family consists of about 80 varieties (Hammarström H. 2016 Glottolog 2.7) spoken by 220 million people across southern and central India and surrounding countries (Steever SB. 1998 In The Dravidian languages (ed. SB Steever), pp. 1–39: 1). Neither the geographical origin of the Dravidian language homeland nor its exact dispersal through time are known. The history of these languages is crucial for understanding prehistory in Eurasia, because despite their current restricted range, these languages played a significant role in influencing other language groups including Indo-Aryan (Indo-European) and Munda (Austroasiatic) speakers. Here, we report the results of a Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of cognate-coded lexical data, elicited first hand from native speakers, to investigate the subgrouping of the Dravidian language family, and provide dates for the major points of diversification. Our results indicate that the Dravidian language family is approximately 4500 years old, a finding that corresponds well with earlier linguistic and archaeological studies. The main branches of the Dravidian language family (North, Central, South I, South II) are recovered, although the placement of languages within these main branches diverges from previous classifications. We find considerable uncertainty with regard to the relationships between the main branches.
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- 2018
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13. Social Practice and Shared History, Not Social Scale, Structure Cross-Cultural Complexity in Kinship Systems.
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Péter Rácz, Sam Passmore, and Fiona M. Jordan
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- 2020
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14. Kinbank : A global database of kinship terminology
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Sam Passmore, Wolfgang Barth, Simon J. Greenhill, Kyla Quinn, Catherine Sheard, Paraskevi Argyriou, Joshua Birchall, Claire Bowern, Jasmine Calladine, Angarika Deb, Anouk Diederen, Niklas P. Metsäranta, Luis Henrique Araujo, Rhiannon Schembri, Jo Hickey-Hall, Terhi Honkola, Alice Mitchell, Lucy Poole, Péter M. Rácz, Sean G. Roberts, Robert M. Ross, Ewan Thomas-Colquhoun, Nicholas Evans, Fiona M. Jordan, Department of Finnish, Finno-Ugrian and Scandinavian Studies, Kinura, and Redhead, D.
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Multidisciplinary ,6121 Languages ,113 Computer and information sciences - Abstract
Publisher Copyright: Copyright: © 2023 Passmore et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. For a single species, human kinship organization is both remarkably diverse and strikingly organized. Kinship terminology is the structured vocabulary used to classify, refer to, and address relatives and family. Diversity in kinship terminology has been analyzed by anthropologists for over 150 years, although recurrent patterning across cultures remains incompletely explained. Despite the wealth of kinship data in the anthropological record, comparative studies of kinship terminology are hindered by data accessibility. Here we present Kinbank, a new database of 210,903 kinterms from a global sample of 1,229 spoken languages. Using open-access and transparent data provenance, Kinbank offers an extensible resource for kinship terminology, enabling researchers to explore the rich diversity of human family organization and to test longstanding hypotheses about the origins and drivers of recurrent patterns. We illustrate our contribution with two examples. We demonstrate strong gender bias in the phonological structure of parent terms across 1,022 languages, and we show that there is no evidence for a coevolutionary relationship between cross-cousin marriage and bifurcate-merging terminology in Bantu languages. Analysing kinship data is notoriously challenging; Kinbank aims to eliminate data accessibility issues from that challenge and provide a platform to build an interdisciplinary understanding of kinship.
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- 2023
15. Kin Against Kin: Internal Co-selection and the Coherence of Kinship Typologies
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Sam Passmore, Kyla Quinn, Wolfgang Barth, Simon J. Greenhill, Fiona M. Jordan, and Nicholas Evans
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Typology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Coherence (statistics) ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Philosophy of biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Variation (linguistics) ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Kinship terminology ,Kinship ,Selection (linguistics) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sociology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Across the world people in different societies structure their family relationships in many different ways. These relationships become encoded in their languages as kinship terminology, a word set that maps variably onto a vast genealogical grid of kinship categories, each of which could in principle vary independently. But the observed diversity of kinship terminology is considerably smaller than the enormous theoretical design space. For the past century anthropologists have captured this variation in typological schemes with only a small number of model system types. Whether those types exhibit the internal co-selection of parts implicit in their use is an outstanding question, as is the sufficiency of typologies in capturing variation as a whole. We interrogate the coherence of classic kinship typologies using modern statistical approaches and systematic data from a new database, Kinbank. We first survey the canonical types and their assumed patterns of internal and external co-selection, then present two data-driven approaches to assess internal coherence. Our first analysis reveals that across parents’ and ego’s (one’s own) generation, typology has limited predictive value: knowing the system in one generation does not reliably predict the other. Though we detect limited co-selection between generations, “disharmonic” systems are equally common. Second, we represent structural diversity with a novel multidimensional approach we term kinship space. This approach reveals, for ego’s generation, some broad patterning consistent with the canonical typology, but diversity (and mixed systems) is considerably higher than classical typologies suggest. Our results strongly challenge the descriptive adequacy of the set of canonical kinship types. Introduction Classic Typologies of Kinship - Hawaiian - Eskimo - Dravidian Systems - Sudanese Systems - Crow/Omaha - The Classic Typology: Recap Our Database - Languages - Kin Types Testing Typological Cohesion: Clearing the Ground with New Data Testing Typological Cohesion: Introducing New Methods - Creating the Kinship Space - Interpreting the Kinship Space -- Cluster Identification -- Eskimo -- Cross-parallal and Sudanese -- Hawaiian Conclusions: On the Internal Coherence of Canonical Types
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- 2021
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16. The Ontogeny of Kinship Categorization
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Alice Mitchell and Fiona M. Jordan
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Cultural Studies ,Cognitive science ,Philosophy of mind ,Social Psychology ,Ontogeny ,05 social sciences ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Categorization ,Kinship ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Human kinship systems play a central role in social organization, as anthropologists have long demonstrated. Much less is known about how cultural schemas of relatedness are transmitted across generations. How do children learn kinship concepts? To what extent is learning affected by known cross-cultural variation in how humans classify kin? This review draws on research in developmental psychology, linguistics, and anthropology to present our current understanding of the social and cognitive foundations of kinship categorization. Amid growing interest in kinship in the cognitive sciences, the paper aims to stimulate new research on the ontogeny of kinship categorization, a rich domain for studying the nexus of language, culture, and cognition. We introduce an interdisciplinary research toolkit to help streamline future research in this area.
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- 2021
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17. Correction to ‘Historical, archaeological and linguistic evidence test the phylogenetic inference of Viking-Age plant use’
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Irene, Teixidor-Toneu, Anneleen, Kool, Simon J, Greenhill, Karoline, Kjesrud, Jade J, Sandstedt, Vincent, Manzanilla, and Fiona M, Jordan
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ethnobotany ,Part III: Deciphering the Patterns of Cultural Variation ,phylogenetic comparative methods ,interdisciplinary research ,cultural evolution ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Research Articles ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
In this paper, past plant knowledge serves as a case study to highlight the promise and challenges of interdisciplinary data collection and interpretation in cultural evolution. Plants are central to human life and yet, apart from the role of major crops, people–plant relations have been marginal to the study of culture. Archaeological, linguistic, and historical evidence are often limited when it comes to studying the past role of plants. This is the case in the Nordic countries, where extensive collections of various plant use records are absent until the 1700s. Here, we test if relatively recent ethnobotanical data can be used to trace back ancient plant knowledge in the Nordic countries. Phylogenetic inferences of ancestral states are evaluated against historical, linguistic, and archaeobotanical evidence. The exercise allows us to discuss the opportunities and shortcomings of using phylogenetic comparative methods to study past botanical knowledge. We propose a ‘triangulation method’ that not only combines multiple lines of evidence, but also quantitative and qualitative approaches. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Foundations of cultural evolution’.
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- 2022
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18. Prestige and content biases together shape the cultural transmission of narratives
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Alarna N. Samarasinghe, Michael C. Gavin, Sean G. Roberts, Richard E. W. Berl, and Fiona M. Jordan
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Cultural Studies ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognitive Psychology ,Empirical research ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics|Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Social and Cultural Anthropology ,Sociocultural evolution ,Cultural transmission in animals ,Applied Psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology ,Salience (language) ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Folklore ,Prestige ,Counterintuitive ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology ,Social learning ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Social and Cultural Anthropology ,Cognitive bias ,P1 ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognitive Psychology ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Folklore ,Anthropology ,H1 ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics|Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Context-based cultural transmission biases such as prestige are thought to have been a primary driver in shaping the dynamics of human cultural evolution. However, few empirical studies have measured the importance of prestige relative to other effects, such as the content biases present within transmitted information. Here, we report the findings of an experimental transmission study designed to compare the simultaneous effects of a high- or low-prestige model with the presence of content containing social, survival, emotional, moral, rational, or counterintuitive information. Results from multimodel inference reveal that prestige is a significant factor in determining salience and recall, but that several content biases, specifically social, survival, negative emotional, and biological counterintuitive information, are significantly more influential. Further, we find evidence that prestige serves as a conditional learning strategy when no content cues are available. Our results demonstrate that content biases serve a vital and underappreciated role in cultural transmission Introduction Methods - Experimental protocol - Participants - Story production - Recordings - Data coding and transcription - Data analysis - Ethics statement Results - Sample demographics - Participants showed preferential recall of biased information - Content biases were more influential than prestige bias - Transmission biases explain little variance in recall Discussion - Prestige bias has a minor effect on transmission - Prestige is unconsciously employed as a secondary bias - Content biases have distinct effects - Narrative structural features may aid transmission - Implications for the understanding of transmission
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- 2021
19. Historical, archaeological and linguistic evidence test the phylogenetic inference of Viking-Age plant use
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Anneleen Kool, Vincent Manzanilla, Irene Teixidor-Toneu, Jade J. Sandstedt, Karoline Kjesrud, Simon J. Greenhill, and Fiona M. Jordan
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Data collection ,Phylogenetic inference ,Linguistic evidence ,Interpretation (philosophy) ,Cultural evolution ,Ethnobotany ,Phylogenetic comparative methods ,Plants ,Scandinavian and Nordic Countries ,Interdisciplinary research ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Genealogy ,Test (assessment) ,Geography ,Knowledge ,Archaeology ,phylogenetic comparative methods ,Cultural Evolution ,Viking Age ,Humans ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Sociocultural evolution - Abstract
In this paper, past plant knowledge serves as a case study to highlight the promise and challenges of interdisciplinary data collection and interpretation in cultural evolution. Plants are central to human life and yet, apart from the role of major crops, people–plant relations have been marginal to the study of culture. Archaeological, linguistic, and historical evidence are often limited when it comes to studying the past role of plants. This is the case in the Nordic countries, where extensive collections of various plant use records are absent until the 1700s. Here, we test if relatively recent ethnobotanical data can be used to trace back ancient plant knowledge in the Nordic countries. Phylogenetic inferences of ancestral states are evaluated against historical, linguistic, and archaeobotanical evidence. The exercise allows us to discuss the opportunities and shortcomings of using phylogenetic comparative methods to study past botanical knowledge. We propose a ‘triangulation method’ that not only combines multiple lines of evidence, but also quantitative and qualitative approaches.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Foundations of cultural evolution’. 1. Introduction 2. Methods a) Ethnobotanical data collection, tree and ancestral state estimation b) Archaeobotanical, historical and linguistic data collection and analyses c) Comparison and combination of PCM estimates with archaeological, historical and linguistic evidence to reconstruct Viking-Age plant use 3. Results a) Comparing PCM estimates with archaeological, historical and linguistic evidence b) The ‘new’ triangulation method: combining PCM-estimated and data-triangulated approaches to reconstruct Viking-Age medicinal and food plant uses 4. Discussion a) Inferring cultural evolution from multiple lines of evidence b) Limitations to phylogenetic inference for the study of ‘meso-evolutionary’ processes c) The added value of interdisciplinary collaboration 5. Conclusion
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- 2021
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20. The Position-Reputation-Information (PRI) scale of individual prestige
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Fiona M. Jordan, Alarna N. Samarasinghe, Michael C. Gavin, and Richard E. W. Berl
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Male ,Culture ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Sociology|Methodology ,Social Sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Surveys ,Mathematical and Statistical Techniques ,Sociology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics|Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics ,Social Change ,Sociocultural evolution ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics ,media_common ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology ,Multidisciplinary ,Prestige ,05 social sciences ,Statistics ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology ,Middle Aged ,Built Structures ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Sociology ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Sociology|Quantitative, Qualitative, Comparative, and Historical Methodologies ,Research Design ,Scale (social sciences) ,Physical Sciences ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics|Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics ,Medicine ,Engineering and Technology ,Female ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology ,Psychology ,Factor Analysis ,Social status ,Reputation ,Cognitive psychology ,Research Article ,Adult ,Adolescent ,Structural Engineering ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Science ,Behavioural sciences ,Models, Psychological ,Research and Analysis Methods ,050105 experimental psychology ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Sociology ,Interpersonal relationship ,Young Adult ,Cultural Evolution ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Interpersonal Relations ,Statistical Methods ,Aged ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology ,Survey Research ,Social change ,Reproducibility of Results ,Linguistics ,Social Status ,Social Class ,Sociolinguistics ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,Mathematics - Abstract
Prestige is a key concept across the social and behavioral sciences and has been implicated as an important driver in the processes governing human learning and behavior and the evolution of culture. However, existing scales of prestige fail to account for the full breadth of its potential determinants or focus only on collective social institutions rather than the individual-level perceptions that underpin everyday social interactions. Here, we use open, extensible methods to unite diverse theoretical ideas into a common measurement tool for individual prestige. Participants evaluated the perceived prestige of regional variations in accented speech using a pool of candidate scale items generated from free-listing tasks and a review of published scales. Through exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses, we find that our resulting 7-item scale, composed of dimensions we term position, reputation, and information (“PRI”), exhibits good model fit, scale validity, and scale reliability. The PRI scale of individual prestige contributes to the integration of existing lines of theory on the concept of prestige, and the scale’s application in Western samples and its extensibility to other cultural contexts serves as a foundation for new theoretical and experimental trajectories across the social and behavioral sciences. Introduction Methods and results: Ethics statement ; Scale construction (study 1) ; Scale evaluation (study 2) ; Scale validity and reliability Discussion
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- 2020
21. CHIELD: The causal hypotheses in evolutionary linguistics database
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Lindell Bromham, Guillaume Jacques, Aleksandrs Berdicevskis, Antonio Benítez-Burraco, Anton Killin, Hedvig Skirgard, Christopher Opie, Sean G. Roberts, Jonas Nölle, Matthew Spike, Monica Tamariz, Olena Shcherbakova, Ruth Singer, Emily Gasser, Sean Lee, Jasmine Calladine, Robert M. Ross, Hannah Little, Angarika Deb, Shuya Zhang, Thomas Pellard, Catherine Sheard, José Segovia-Martín, Peeter Tinits, Simon J. Greenhill, Archie Humphreys-Balkwill, Sam Passmore, Ewan Thomas-Colquhoun, Stephen Francis Mann, Christian Kliesch, Kaius Sinnemäki, Fiona M. Jordan, Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution (DLCE), Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (MPI-SHH), Max-Planck-Gesellschaft-Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Centre de Recherches Linguistiques sur l'Asie Orientale (CRLAO), École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS)-Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (Inalco)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Australian National University (ANU), MCS, Argonne National Laboratory [Lemont] (ANL), Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Lengua Española, Lingüística y Teoría de la Literatura, European Union (UE). H2020, European Research Council (ERC), Academy of Finland, Australian Research Council, Leverhulme Trust, John Templeton Fund, University of Helsinki, General Linguistics, GramAdapt, and Department of Languages
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SELECTION ,LEARNERS ,Linguistics and Language ,Relation (database) ,Computer science ,Inference ,FREQUENCY ,computer.software_genre ,01 natural sciences ,050105 experimental psychology ,010104 statistics & probability ,CULTURAL-EVOLUTION ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Gossip ,WORD-ORDER ,Formal specification ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Selection (linguistics) ,6121 Languages ,LANGUAGES ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,causal inference ,0101 mathematics ,[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics ,Sociocultural evolution ,database ,Evolutionary linguistics ,Database ,05 social sciences ,COLLABORATIONS ,Causal inference ,PATTERNS ,INFERENCE ,DIRECTED ACYCLIC GRAPHS ,causal graphs ,computer - Abstract
Language is one of the most complex of human traits. There are many hypotheses about how it originated, what factors shaped its diversity, and what ongoing processes drive how it changes. We present the Causal Hypotheses in Evolutionary Linguistics Database (CHIELD, https://chield.excd.org/), a tool for expressing, exploring, and evaluating hypotheses. It allows researchers to integrate multiple theories into a coherent narrative, helping to design future research. We present design goals, a formal specification, and an implementation for this database. Source code is freely available for other fields to take advantage of this tool. Some initial results are presented, including identifying conflicts in theories about gossip and ritual, comparing hypotheses relating population size and morphological complexity, and an author relation network. European Research Council (ERC) 639291 Academy of Finland 296212 European Research Council (ERC) 805371 Australian Research Council FL130100111 Leverhulme Trust CF-2016-435 Australian Research Council FL130100141 John Templeton Fund 40128
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- 2020
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22. Comparative phylogenetic methods and the cultural evolution of medicinal plant use
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Irene Teixidor-Toneu, Fiona M. Jordan, and Julie A. Hawkins
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Culture ,Biodiversity ,Plant Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,ethnobotany ,03 medical and health sciences ,Humans ,cultural evolution ,Traditional knowledge ,Sociocultural evolution ,Environmental planning ,Phylogeny ,media_common ,Plants, Medicinal ,Genomics ,Phylogenetic comparative methods ,Special Interest Group ,030104 developmental biology ,Geography ,Variation (linguistics) ,Ethnobotany ,traditional knowledge ,medicinal plants ,Phytotherapy ,Diversity (politics) - Abstract
Human life depends on plant biodiversity and the ways in which plants are used are culturally determined. Whilst anthropologists have used phylogenetic comparative methods (PCMs) to gain an increasingly sophisticated understanding of the evolution of political, religious, social, and material culture, plant use has been almost entirely neglected. Medicinal plants are of special interest because of their role in maintaining people’s health across the world. PCMs in particular, and cultural evolutionary theory in general, provide a framework in which to study the diversity of medicinal plant applications cross-culturally, and to infer changes in plant use through time. These methods can be applied to single medicinal plants as well as the entire set of plants used by a culture for medicine, and they account for the non-independence of data when testing for floristic, cultural or other drivers of plant use. With cultural, biological, and linguistic diversity under threat, gaining a deeper and broader understanding of the variation of medicinal plant use through time and space is pressing.
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- 2018
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23. Editors’ Review and Introduction: The Cultural Evolution of Cognition
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Sieghard Beller, Fiona M. Jordan, and Andrea Bender
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Linguistics and Language ,Process (engineering) ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Culture ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Diversification (marketing strategy) ,conceptual tools ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Artificial Intelligence ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,Sociology ,Sociocultural evolution ,Cognitive science ,language ,Field (Bourdieu) ,05 social sciences ,Social learning ,cognitive evolution ,Biological Evolution ,Social Learning ,culture ,Focus (linguistics) ,Human-Computer Interaction ,social learning ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This topic addresses a question of key interest to cognitive science, namely which factors may have triggered, constrained, or shaped the course of cognitive evolution. It highlights the relevance of culture as a driving force in this process, with a special focus on social learning and language, conceptual tools, and material culture. In so doing, the topic combines two goals: to provide an overview of current empirical and theoretical work leading this field, tailored for a wider cognitive science audience, and to investigate the potential for integrating multiple perspectives across several timescales and levels of analysis, from the microlevel of individual behavior to the macrolevel of cultural change and language diversification. One key purpose is to assess the extent to which the different research approaches can cross‐fertilize each other, thereby also contributing to the advancement of cognitive science more broadly. acceptedVersion
- Published
- 2019
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24. Pathways to Social Inequality
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Ty Tuff, Russell D. Gray, Geoff Kushnick, Bobbi S. Low, Hannah J. Haynie, Patrick H. Kavanagh, Kathryn R. Kirby, Simon J. Greenhill, Bruno Vilela, Michael C. Gavin, Carol R. Ember, Carlos A. Botero, and Fiona M. Jordan
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0106 biological sciences ,Cultural Studies ,Resource (biology) ,Real property ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Other Anthropology ,Social class ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Structural equation modeling ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Other Anthropology ,Economics ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Other Social and Behavioral Sciences ,0601 history and archaeology ,Social inequality ,Economic geography ,Applied Psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Other Social and Behavioral Sciences ,060102 archaeology ,Population size ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Anthropology ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,SocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Inheritance - Abstract
Social inequality is ubiquitous in contemporary human societies, and has deleterious social and ecological impacts. However, the factors that shape the emergence and maintenance of inequality remain widely debated. Here we conduct a global analysis of pathways to inequality by comparing 408 non-industrial societies in the anthropological record (described largely between 1860 and 1960) that vary in degree of inequality. We apply structural equation modelling to open-access environmental and ethnographic data and explore two alternative models varying in the links among factors proposed by prior literature, including environmental conditions, resource intensification, wealth transmission, population size and a well-documented form of inequality: social class hierarchies. We found support for a model in which the probability of social class hierarchies is associated directly with increases in population size, the propensity to use intensive agriculture and domesticated large mammals, unigeniture inheritance of real property and hereditary political succession. We suggest that influence of environmental variables on inequality is mediated by measures of resource intensification, which, in turn, may influence inequality directly or indirectly via effects on wealth transmission variables. Overall, we conclude that in our analysis a complex network of effects are associated with social class hierarchies.
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- 2019
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25. Nota sobre o sistema de parentesco em Proto-Tupí-Guaraní
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Fiona M. Jordan, Luis Henrique Oliveira, and Joshua Birchall
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Etnologia indígena ,050101 languages & linguistics ,Linguistics and Language ,Archeology ,lcsh:Latin America. Spanish America ,CIENCIAS HUMANAS [CNPQ] ,Filogenética computacional ,Linguística histórica ,Language and Linguistics ,Indigenous ethnology ,lcsh:Social Sciences ,Historical linguistics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Parentesco ,Tupí-Guaraní ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Kinship ,0303 health sciences ,4. Education ,Philosophy ,030305 genetics & heredity ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:F1201-3799 ,Computational phylogenetics ,lcsh:H ,Anthropology ,Humanities - Abstract
Resumo Este estudo explora o sistema de terminologia de parentesco da língua Proto-Tupí-Guaraní (PTG) a partir de uma perspectiva interdisciplinar, que soma contribuições da Etnologia, da Linguística Histórica e dos trabalhos etnográficos realizados com povos Tupí-Guaraní. Fazem-se inferências sobre pré-história cultural utilizando métodos filogenéticos comparativos, um conjunto de ferramentas computacionais para explorar mudanças evolutivas em populações relacionadas, aplicados a um banco de dados de termos de parentesco em 24 línguas Tupí-Guaraní. Discute-se a amostra usada no estudo, os procedimentos de codificação adotados para dados tipológicos e os componentes, valores iniciais e premissas do modelo evolutivo. A análise de reconstrução de estados ancestrais baseada no critério de máxima parcimônia reconstrói vários traços tipológicos do sistema de parentesco do PTG, como: fusão e bifurcação na primeira geração ascendente (+1); distinções na terminologia de irmãos baseadas na idade relativa e no sexo do ego; e equação terminológica entre irmãos e primos paralelos. O estudo avalia o estado atual da reconstrução de formas linguísticas para termos de parentesco em PTG e mapeia estas formas no sistema inferido por análise comparativa. Este estudo de comprovação de conceito demonstra a utilidade de análise filogenética para inferir estruturas de sistemas de parentesco em comunidades linguísticas ancestrais. Abstract This study explores the kinship terminology of Proto-Tupí-Guaraní (PTG) through an interdisciplinary perspective that draws on ethnology, historical linguistics, and the ethnography of Tupi-Guaranian peoples. Inferences about cultural prehistory are made through phylogenetic comparative methods, a suite of computational tools for exploring evolutionary change in related populations, applied to a dataset of kinship terms from 24 Tupi-Guaranian languages. The study outlines the coding procedure for typological data, along with the parameters, inputs, and assumptions of the evolutionary models. Parsimony-based ancestral state inference is used to reconstruct a number of typological features of the kinship system of PTG, such as fusion and bifurcation in the first ascending generation (+1), relative age and sex-based distinctions in sibling terminology, and terminological equation between siblings and parallel cousins. The current state of reconstruction of the linguistic forms for kinship terms in PTG is reviewed, and these forms are mapped onto the system inferred through comparative analysis. This proof-of-concept study demonstrates the utility of phylogenetic analysis for inferring kinship structures in ancestral language communities.
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- 2019
26. Post-Marital Residence Patterns Show Lineage-Specific Evolution
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Murray P. Cox, Jiřà C Moravec, Russell D. Gray, Claire Bowern, Robert M. Ross, Stephen Marsland, Simon J. Greenhill, Quentin D. Atkinson, and Fiona M. Jordan
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0106 biological sciences ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,education.field_of_study ,Post-marital residence ,05 social sciences ,Population ,Subsistence agriculture ,Bayesian Phylogenetics ,050109 social psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Bantu languages ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Cross-cultural studies ,Geography ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Kinship ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Residence ,Economic geography ,Language family ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Pace - Abstract
Where a newly-married couple lives, termed post-marital residence, varies cross-culturally and changes over time. While many factors have been proposed as drivers of this change, among them general features of human societies like warfare, migration and gendered division of subsistence labour, little is known about whether changes in residence patterns exhibit global regularities. Here, we study ethnographic observations of post-marital residence in societies from five large language families (Austronesian, Bantu, Indo-European, Pama-Nyungan and Uto-Aztecan), encompassing 371 ethnolinguistic groups ranging widely in local ecologies and lifeways, and covering over half the world's population and geographical area. We apply Bayesian comparative methods to test the hypothesis that post-marital residence patterns have evolved in similar ways across different geographical regions. By reconstructing past post-marital residence states, we compare transition rates and models of evolution across groups, while integrating the historical descent relationships of human societies. We find that each language family possesses its own best fitting model, demonstrating that the mode and pace of post-marital residence evolution is lineage-specific rather than global.
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- 2018
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27. The Evolutionary Approach to History
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Marion Blute and Fiona M. Jordan
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History ,Phylogenetics ,Sociocultural evolution ,Epistemology - Abstract
There are three forms of modern Darwinian evolutionism in the social sciences and humanities: the gene-based biological, the social learning-based sociocultural, and gene–culture coevolution dealing with their interaction. This chapter focuses on cultural or sociocultural evolution. It begins with a discussion of the Darwinian-inspired evolutionary approach to history. It then outlines modern evolutionary phylogenetic methods borrowed from biology but now used extensively in the social sciences and humanities. The chapter provides examples of how language trees may be inferred; phylogenetic comparative methods that use language trees to answer questions about aspects of geographical, social, political, cultural, or economic organization; and phylogenetic investigations of material culture and traditions. It is concluded that culture does indeed “descend with modification.”
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- 2018
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28. The sequential evolution of land tenure norms
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Geoff Kushnick, Russell D. Gray, and Fiona M. Jordan
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Receipt ,Virtual archaeology ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Relative strength ,Power (social and political) ,Niche construction ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Sociology ,Economic geography ,Social evolution ,Land tenure ,Social psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
article i nfo Article history: Initial receipt 8 April 2013 Final revision received 11 March 2014 Land tenure norms are fundamental to our understanding of the evolution of human cooperation and the emergence of inequality in large-scale societies. A prime example of niche construction, their emergence transformed the selective pressures facing early cultivators. We use phylogenetic methods to reconstruct the evolutionary trajectories of land tenure norms in 97 Austronesian societies. We defined land tenure norms as the primary means by which people use, possess, and redistribute land. Based on existing ethnographic accounts, we coded each society as having one of the following primary land tenure norms: none (N), group (G), kin-group (K), and individual (I). Our analyses of phylogenetic and geographic signal suggest that vertical transmission patterned land tenure norms to a greater degree than horizontal transmission. We assessed the relative strength of plausible models of land tenure evolution using maximum likelihood analyses with lexical and time-scaled trees. Surprisingly, they revealed strong support for a model that allows sequential gains and losses along the pathway N-I-G-K. Our probabilistic reconstruction of ancestral states decisively rejected the claim that Proto-Malayo-Polynesian society was marked by G or K. Our results demonstrate the power of "virtual archaeology" for revealing the dynamics of social evolution.
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- 2014
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29. Evolutionary Approaches to Cross-Cultural Anthropology
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Brad R. Huber and Fiona M. Jordan
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Evolutionary anthropology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Cultural analysis ,Anthropology ,Cultural group selection ,Sociocultural anthropology ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,Sociology ,Four field approach ,Applied anthropology ,Human behavioral ecology ,Ecological anthropology - Abstract
This special issue “Evolutionary Approaches to Cross-Cultural Anthropology” brings together scholars from the fields of behavioral ecology, evolutionary psychology, and cultural evolution whose cross-cultural work draws on evolutionary theory and methods. The papers here are a subset of those presented at a symposium we organized for the 2011 meeting of the Society for Cross-Cultural Research held in Charleston, South Carolina. Collectively, our authors show how an engagement with cultural variation has enriched evolutionary anthropology, and these papers showcase how cross-cultural research can benefit from the theoretical and methodological contributions of an evolutionary approach.
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- 2013
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30. A Phylogenetic Analysis of the Evolution of Austronesian Sibling Terminologies
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Fiona M. Jordan
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Male ,Anthropology ,Biology ,Semantics ,Psycholinguistics ,Terminology ,Cultural Evolution ,Terminology as Topic ,Genetics ,Humans ,Family ,Sociocultural evolution ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Language ,Likelihood Functions ,Siblings ,Galton's problem ,Australia ,Genetic Variation ,Bayes Theorem ,Austronesian languages ,Phylogenetic comparative methods ,Markov Chains ,Genealogy ,Variation (linguistics) ,Female ,Monte Carlo Method - Abstract
Social structure in human societies is underpinned by the variable expression of ideas about relatedness between different types of kin. We express these ideas through language in our kin terminology: to delineate who is kin and who is not, and to attach meanings to the types of kin labels associated with different individuals. Cross-culturally, there is a regular and restricted range of patterned variation in kin terminologies, and to date, our understanding of this diversity has been hampered by inadequate techniques for dealing with the hierarchical relatedness of languages (Galton's Prob- lem). Here I use maximum-likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic compara- tive methods to begin to tease apart the processes underlying the evolution of kin terminologies in the Austronesian language family, focusing on terms for siblings. I infer (1) the probable ancestral states and (2) evolutionary models of change for the semantic distinctions of relative age (older/younger sibling) and relative sex (same-sex/opposite-sex). Analyses show that early Austronesian languages contained the relative-age, but not the relative-sex distinction; the latter was reconstructed firmly only for the ancestor of Eastern Malayo-Polynesian languages. Both distinctions were best charac- terized by evolutionary models where the gains and losses of the semantic distinctions were equally likely. A multi-state model of change examined how the relative-sex distinction could be elaborated and found that some transitions in kin terms were not possible: jumps from absence to heavily elaborated were very unlikely, as was piece-wise dismantling of elaborate distinctions. Cultural ideas about what types of kin distinctions are important can be embedded in the semantics of language; using a phylogenetic evolutionary framework we can understand how those distinctions in meaning change through time. Social structure in human societies is underpinned by the variable expression of ideas about relatedness between kin. Notions of marriageability, determination of group membership, rules of residence and reciprocal obligations, and theories of child-rearing influence much of how human communities have structured their interactions. Anthropologists have long noted that while on the surface there is 1 Evolutionary Processes in Language and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, PB 310
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- 2011
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31. Your place or mine? A phylogenetic comparative analysis of marital residence in Indo-European and Austronesian societies
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Fiona M. Jordan and Laura Fortunato
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Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ,Comparative method ,Biology ,White People ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cultural Evolution ,Ethnicity ,Kinship ,Humans ,Marriage ,Sociocultural evolution ,Social organization ,History, Ancient ,Phylogeny ,Ecology ,Bayes Theorem ,Linguistics ,Articles ,Phylogenetic comparative methods ,Models, Theoretical ,Cross-cultural studies ,Genealogy ,Housing ,Matrilocal residence ,Female ,Residence ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
Accurate reconstruction of prehistoric social organization is important if we are to put together satisfactory multidisciplinary scenarios about, for example, the dispersal of human groups. Such considerations apply in the case of Indo-European and Austronesian, two large-scale language families that are thought to represent Neolithic expansions. Ancestral kinship patterns have mostly been inferred through reconstruction of kin terminologies in ancestral proto-languages using the linguistic comparative method, and through geographical or distributional arguments based on the comparative patterns of kin terms and ethnographic kinship ‘facts’. While these approaches are detailed and valuable, the processes through which conclusions have been drawn from the data fail to provide explicit criteria for systematic testing of alternative hypotheses. Here, we use language trees derived using phylogenetic tree-building techniques on Indo-European and Austronesian vocabulary data. With these trees, ethnographic data and Bayesian phylogenetic comparative methods, we statistically reconstruct past marital residence and infer rates of cultural change between different residence forms, showing Proto-Indo-European to be virilocal and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian uxorilocal. The instability of uxorilocality and the rare loss of virilocality once gained emerge as common features of both families.
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- 2010
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32. Visual depictions of female genitalia differ depending on source
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Volker Sommer, Helena Howarth, and Fiona M. Jordan
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Female circumcision ,Anthropology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Feminism ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Vulva ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Reference Values ,Perception ,Erotica ,medicine ,Humans ,Pornography ,Sex organ ,Textbooks as Topic ,education ,Normality ,media_common ,Internet ,education.field_of_study ,Philosophy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Variation (linguistics) ,Female ,Psychology ,Attitude to Health ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Very little research has attempted to describe normal human variation in female genitalia, and no studies have compared the visual images that women might use in constructing their ideas of average and acceptable genital morphology to see if there are any systematic differences. The objective of the present work was to determine if visual depictions of the vulva differed according to their source so as to alert medical professionals and their patients to how these depictions might capture variation and thus influence perceptions of 'normality'. A comparative analysis was conducted by measuring (a) published visual materials from human anatomy textbooks in a university library, (b) feminist publications (print and online) depicting vulval morphology and (c) online pornography, focusing on the most visited and freely accessible sites in the UK. Post hoc tests showed that labial protuberance was significantly less (p0.001, equivalent to approximately 7emsp14;mm) in images from online pornography compared to feminist publications. All five measures taken of vulval features were significantly correlated (p0.001) in the online pornography sample, indicating a less varied range of differences in organ proportions than the other sources where not all measures were correlated. Women and health professionals should be aware that specific sources of imagery may depict different types of genital morphology and may not accurately reflect true variation in the population, and consultations for genital surgeries should include discussion about the actual and perceived range of variation in female genital morphology.
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- 2010
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33. Internationalisation in Hospitality, Leisure, Sport and Tourism Higher Education: A Call for Further Reflexivity in Curriculum Development
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Fiona M. Jordan
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Higher education ,business.industry ,Poison control ,Hospitality industry ,Education ,Hospitality ,Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management ,Reflexivity ,Pedagogy ,Curriculum development ,Sociology ,business ,Curriculum ,Tourism - Abstract
Social scientists have long-identified the importance of reflexivity and of positioning the researcher as an embodied and emotional presence in the design of studies, and the collection, analysis, interpretation and presentation of data. In doing so they,"reveal, understand and analyse, not only the product of knowledge but its production and therefore, its producer" (Aldridge, 1993:53 [author's original emphasis]). Such work problematises the notion of investigation as a straightforward and impersonal activity and interrogates the power relationships inherent in it. Curricula in Higher Education (HE), on the other hand, often appear simply to have evolved with little open acknowledgement of the cultural, political and personal dimensions of that process.
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- 2008
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34. On sex and suicide bombing: An evaluation of Kanazawa's ‘evolutionary psychological imagination’
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Fiona M. Jordan, David W. Lawson, and Kesson Magid
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Social Psychology ,Perspective (graphical) ,Poison control ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Criminology ,Social issues ,Suicide prevention ,Argument ,Anthropology ,Terrorism ,Pornography ,Sociology ,Explanatory power ,Social psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Kanazawa (2007) proposes the ‘evolutionary psychological imagination’ (p.7) as an authoritative framework for understanding complex social and public issues. As a case study of this approach, Kanazawa addresses acts of international terrorism, specifically suicide bombings committed by Muslim men. It is proposed that a comprehensive explanation of such acts can be gained from taking an evolutionary perspective armed with only three points of cultural knowledge: 1. Muslims are exceptionally polygynous, 2. Muslim men believe they will gain reproductive access to 72 virgins if they die as a martyr and 3. Muslim men have limited access to pornography, which might otherwise relieve the tension built up from intra-sexual competition. We agree with Kanazawa that evolutionary models of human behaviour can contribute to our understanding of even the most complex social issues. However, Kanazawa’s case study, of what he refers to as ‘World War III’, rests on a flawed theoretical argument, lacks empirical backing, and holds little in the way of explanatory power.
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- 2008
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35. D-PLACE: A Global Database of Cultural, Linguistic and Environmental Diversity
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Bobbi S. Low, Damián E. Blasi, Carol R. Ember, Hans-Jörg Bibiko, Claire Bowern, Russell D. Gray, Michael C. Gavin, William Tulio Divale, Stephanie Gomes-Ng, Simon J. Greenhill, Fiona M. Jordan, Joe McCarter, Kathryn R. Kirby, Carlos A. Botero, and Dan Leehr
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Male ,cross ,Databases, Factual ,Culture ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,computer.software_genre ,Ecological anthropology ,01 natural sciences ,Language geography ,Sociology ,Cultural diversity ,Psychology ,Sociocultural evolution ,lcsh:Science ,media_common ,Language ,Data Management ,Multidisciplinary ,Database ,Geography ,Cultural group selection ,Phylogenetic Analysis ,Cultural Diversity ,language families ,Linguistics ,phylogenetics ,Phylogenetics ,Phylogeography ,Biogeography ,Linguistic Geography ,Female ,Research Article ,Computer and Information Sciences ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,010603 evolutionary biology ,Language Families ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cross-Cultural Studies ,Genetics ,Cross-cultural ,Humans ,Evolutionary Systematics ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Molecular Biology ,Taxonomy ,Molecular Biology Assays and Analysis Techniques ,Evolutionary Biology ,language ,Population Biology ,phylogenetic analysis ,Ecology and Environmental Sciences ,lcsh:R ,Cognitive Psychology ,Biology and Life Sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Cultural analysis ,linguistic geography ,Earth Sciences ,Languages ,Cognitive Science ,lcsh:Q ,computer ,Population Genetics ,Diversity (politics) ,Neuroscience - Abstract
From the foods we eat and the houses we construct, to our religious practices and political organization, to who we can marry and the types of games we teach our children, the diversity of cultural practices in the world is astounding. Yet, our ability to visualize and understand this diversity is limited by the ways it has been documented and shared: on a culture-by-culture basis, in locally-told stories or difficult-to-access repositories. In this paper we introduce D-PLACE, the Database of Places, Language, Culture, and Environment. This expandable and open-access database (accessible at https://d-place.org) brings together a dispersed corpus of information on the geography, language, culture, and environment of over 1400 human societies. We aim to enable researchers to investigate the extent to which patterns in cultural diversity are shaped by different forces, including shared history, demographics, migration/diffusion, cultural innovations, and environmental and ecological conditions. We detail how D-PLACE helps to overcome four common barriers to understanding these forces: i) location of relevant cultural data, (ii) linking data from distinct sources using diverse ethnonyms, (iii) variable time and place foci for data, and (iv) spatial and historical dependencies among cultural groups that present challenges for analysis. D-PLACE facilitates the visualisation of relationships among cultural groups and between people and their environments, with results downloadable as tables, on a map, or on a linguistic tree. We also describe how D-PLACE can be used for exploratory, predictive, and evolutionary analyses of cultural diversity by a range of users, from members of the worldwide public interested in contrasting their own cultural practices with those of other societies, to researchers using large-scale computational phylogenetic analyses to study cultural evolution. In summary, we hope that D-PLACE will enable new lines of investigation into the major drivers of cultural change and global patterns of cultural diversity.
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- 2016
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36. Engaging in chit-chat (and all that)
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Fiona M. Jordan
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Social Psychology ,Computer science ,Anthropology ,Language evolution ,Media studies ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2007
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37. Semantic systems in closely related languages
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Michael Dunn, Fiona M. Jordan, and Asifa Majid
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Linguistics and Language ,Communication ,Grammatical gender ,spatial relations ,colour ,business.industry ,Agglutination ,Object (grammar) ,Semantic domain ,Semantics ,Germanic languages ,Meaning, culture and cognition ,Language and Linguistics ,Lexical item ,Linguistics ,Variation (linguistics) ,Language in Society ,body parts ,Noun ,evolution ,containers ,The study of olfactory language and cognition across diverse cultures, as well as within specialist communities such as perfumiers and wine-tasters (Vici) ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
In each semantic domain studied to date, there is considerable variation in how meanings are expressed across languages. But are some semantic domains more likely to show variation than others? Is the domain of space more or less variable in its expression than other semantic domains, such as containers, body parts, or colours? According to many linguists, the meanings expressed in grammaticised expressions, such as (spatial) adpositions, are more likely to be similar across languages than meanings expressed in open class lexical items. On the other hand, some psychologists predict there ought to be more variation across languages in the meanings of adpositions, than in the meanings of nouns. This is because relational categories, such as those expressed as adpositions, are said to be constructed by language; whereas object categories expressed as nouns are predicted to be “given by the world”. We tested these hypotheses by comparing the semantic systems of closely related languages. Previous cross-linguistic studies emphasise the importance of studying diverse languages, but we argue that a focus on closely related languages is advantageous because domains can be compared in a culturally- and historically-informed manner. Thus we collected data from 12 Germanic languages. Naming data were collected from at least 20 speakers of each language for containers, body-parts, colours, and spatial relations. We found the semantic domains of colour and body-parts were the most similar across languages. Containers showed some variation, but spatial relations expressed in adpositions showed the most variation. The results are inconsistent with the view expressed by most linguists. Instead, we find meanings expressed in grammaticised meanings are more variable than meanings in open class lexical items.
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- 2015
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38. The semantics and morphology of household container names in Icelandic and Dutch
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Matthew Whelpton, Fiona M. Jordan, and þórhalla Guðmundsdóttir Beck
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Linguistics and Language ,Intensions ,Diminutives ,Object (grammar) ,Compounding ,Germanic languages ,Naming strategies ,Space (commercial competition) ,Semantics ,Container (type theory) ,Extensions ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,language.human_language ,Diminutive ,Geography ,Object classification ,language ,Nesting (computing) ,Icelandic - Abstract
In this paper, we report an experiment on the naming of household containers in Dutch and Icelandic carried out as part of the Evolution of Semantic Systems project (EoSS; Majid et al., 2011). This naming experiment allows us to support and elaborate on a hypothesis by Malt et al. (2003) that productive morphology in the naming domain can have an influence on boundary placement within the extensional space. Specifically, we demonstrate that the Dutch diminutive -(t)je favours a cut between small items versus others, whereas Icelandic, which does not use the diminutive in this domain, favours a cut between large items and others. This is not a typological effect, as Dutch and Icelandic are both Germanic languages and both have diminutive morphology available in principle. We find no evidence that the diminutive produces a proliferation of terms and/or fine-grained nesting within the extensional domain. Rather, the Dutch diminutive favours a more even distribution of terms across the space whereas Icelandic favours broad inclusive terms with a number of narrower specialist terms. Further, the extensional space defined by the diminutive is not associated with its own clear prototypical exemplar. Using evidence from compounding and modification, we also consider which semantic features are prominent in differentiating categories within the domain. By far the most prominent in both languages is the inferred contents of the container. Other than contents, however, the languages differ in the range and prominence of features such as intended usage or material of composition. Our results demonstrate that in order to understand the processes that produce semantic divisions of basic object classes, we should consider fine-grained analyses of closely related languages alongside analyses of typologically different languages. 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2015
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39. ‘Khoisan’ sibling terminologies in historical perspective
- Author
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Tom Güldemann, Gertrud Boden, Fiona M. Jordan, Güldemann, Tom, and Fehn, Anne-Marie
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Phylogenetic tree ,Comparative method ,Anthropology ,Perspective (graphical) ,Sibling ,Biology ,Genealogy - Abstract
This paper combines regional anthropological comparison, historical linguistics and phylogenetic comparative methodology (PCM) concerning the analysis of sibling terminology in order to address the historical relationships between the languages of the three South African Khoisan families, Kx’a, Tuu and Khoe-Kwadi. We look first at the ways how siblings are grouped into kin classes and secondly how sibling terms as lexical items are linguistically related in and between these families. Their demonstrable internal linguistic relationships imply original family-specific sibling terminologies with relevant lexemes as part of the proto-languages used within a social culture of the proto-societies (cf. Murdock 1949: 346f.; Elmendorf 1961: 365; Jordan 2011: 299). Our hypotheses for proto-terminologies, contact scenarios and trajectories of change are finally submitted to PCM probability tests. By trying to detect signals of genealogical or contact relationships we hope to contribute to the reconstruction of pre-historical processes in the Kalahari Basin, including testing hypotheses found in the previous literature, among them the claim about a deep structural unity of Khoisan kinship systems.
- Published
- 2014
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40. Cultural Evolution of the Structure of Human Groups
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Daniel B. M. Haun, Laurent Lehmann, Marco A. Janssen, Peter Turchin, Pieter Francois, Sarah Mathew, Fiona M. Jordan, D. H. Hruschka, Peter J. Richerson, Herbert Gintis, P Wiessner, James A. Kitts, C P van Schaik, University of Zurich, Richerson, Peter J, and Christiansen, Morten H
- Subjects
10207 Department of Anthropology ,Structure (mathematical logic) ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,Anthropology ,Biology ,Sociocultural evolution - Published
- 2013
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41. Testing for divergent transmission histories among cultural characters: a study using Bayesian phylogenetic methods and Iranian tribal textile data
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Luke J. Matthews, Mark Collard, Charles L. Nunn, Fiona M. Jordan, and Jamie J. Tehrani
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Culture ,Bayesian probability ,lcsh:Medicine ,Big Five personality traits and culture ,Iran ,Biology ,Bayesian ,Bayes' theorem ,Phylogenetics ,Cultural Evolution ,Animals ,Humans ,Ecology/Behavioral Ecology ,cultural evolution ,Sociocultural evolution ,lcsh:Science ,Cultural transmission in animals ,cultural phylogenetics ,Phylogeny ,Genetics ,Evolutionary Biology/Animal Behavior ,Multidisciplinary ,Phylogenetic tree ,Textiles ,lcsh:R ,Bayes Theorem ,Bayes factor ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Models, Theoretical ,Genealogy ,textiles ,Evolutionary Biology/Human Evolution ,Archaeology ,Anthropology ,lcsh:Q ,Sequence Alignment ,Research Article - Abstract
Background: Archaeologists and anthropologists have long recognized that different cultural complexes may have distinct descent histories, but they have lacked analytical techniques capable of easily identifying such incongruence. Here, we show how Bayesian phylogenetic analysis can be used to identify incongruent cultural histories. We employ the approach to investigate Iranian tribal textile traditions.Methods: We used Bayes factor comparisons in a phylogenetic framework to test two models of cultural evolution: the hierarchically integrated system hypothesis and the multiple coherent units hypothesis. In the hierarchically integrated system hypothesis, a core tradition of characters evolves through descent with modification and characters peripheral to the core are exchanged among contemporaneous populations. In the multiple coherent units hypothesis, a core tradition does not exist. Rather, there are several cultural units consisting of sets of characters that have different histories of descent.Results: For the Iranian textiles, the Bayesian phylogenetic analyses supported the multiple coherent units hypothesis over the hierarchically integrated system hypothesis. Our analyses suggest that pile-weave designs represent a distinct cultural unit that has a different phylogenetic history compared to other textile characters.Conclusions: The results from the Iranian textiles are consistent with the available ethnographic evidence, which suggests that the commercial rug market has influenced pile-rug designs but not the techniques or designs incorporated in the other textiles produced by the tribes. We anticipate that Bayesian phylogenetic tests for inferring cultural units will be of great value for researchers interested in studying the evolution of cultural traits including language, behavior, and material culture.
- Published
- 2011
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42. Macro-evolutionary studies of cultural diversity: A review of empirical studies of cultural transmission and cultural adaptation
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Fiona M. Jordan and Ruth Mace
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Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ,Ecology ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Adaptation, Biological ,Cultural neuroscience ,Cultural Diversity ,Articles ,Models, Theoretical ,Biology ,Ecological anthropology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Epistemology ,Empirical research ,Cultural analysis ,Cultural Evolution ,Cultural diversity ,Humans ,Social Behavior ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Sociocultural evolution ,Cultural transmission in animals ,Anthropology, Cultural ,Ecosystem ,Phylogeny - Abstract
A growing body of theoretical and empirical research has examined cultural transmission and adaptive cultural behaviour at the individual, within-group level. However, relatively few studies have tried to examine proximate transmission or test ultimate adaptive hypotheses about behavioural or cultural diversity at a between-societies macro-level. In both the history of anthropology and in present-day work, a common approach to examining adaptive behaviour at the macro-level has been through correlating various cultural traits with features of ecology. We discuss some difficulties with simple ecological associations, and then review cultural phylogenetic studies that have attempted to go beyond correlations to understand the underlying cultural evolutionary processes. We conclude with an example of a phylogenetically controlled approach to understanding proximate transmission pathways in Austronesian cultural diversity.
- Published
- 2011
43. Origins of Spatial, Temporal, and Numerical Cognition
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Fiona M. Jordan, Daniel B. M. Haun, Giorgio Vallortigara, and Nicky Clayton
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Cognitive science ,Comparative psychology ,Trends in Cognitive Sciences ,Numerical cognition ,Cognition ,Numerosity adaptation effect ,Cognitive skill ,Permission ,Psychology ,Sensory cue - Abstract
Publisher Summary This chapter explains how the careful selection of animal models provides exciting, novel perspectives on the development and evolution of human cognitive structure. This chapter also reviews evidence from spatial, temporal and numerical cognition, all three of which are foundational cognitive domains ensuring basic vertebrate experience. Competing theories have been formulated as to how animals and humans reorient themselves in these circumstances, which include Fodorian modular encapsulated computations of the shape of the extended surfaces layout, combination of environmental cues weighted according to their experienced reliability, image-matching processes operating on panoramic 2D projections of current and remembered environments. When the objects were similar, chicks chose the set of objects of larger numerosity, irrespective of the number of objects they had been reared with. Taxonomically informed cross-species comparisons within our immediate primate family, the great apes, offer a way to investigate the evolutionary history of late-blooming human cognitive skills. The power of phylogenetic inference depends on sample size and the completeness of the tested family of species.
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- 2011
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44. Origins of spatial, temporal and numerical cognition: Insights from comparative psychology
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Daniel B. M. Haun, Nicky Clayton, Fiona M. Jordan, and Giorgio Vallortigara
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Cognitive science ,Comparative psychology ,Psychology, Comparative ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Repertoire ,Numerical cognition ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Cognition ,Space (commercial competition) ,Developmental psychology ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Social cognition ,Motor cognition ,Space Perception ,Models, Animal ,Time Perception ,Comparative cognition ,Animals ,Humans ,Psychology ,Mathematics - Abstract
Contemporary comparative cognition has a large repertoire of animal models and methods, with concurrent theoretical advances that are providing initial answers to crucial questions about human cognition. What cognitive traits are uniquely human? What are the species-typical inherited predispositions of the human mind? What is the human mind capable of without certain types of specific experiences with the surrounding environment? Here, we review recent findings from the domains of space, time and number cognition. These findings are produced using different comparative methodologies relying on different animal species, namely birds and non-human great apes. The study of these species not only reveals the range of cognitive abilities across vertebrates, but also increases our understanding of human cognition in crucial ways.
- Published
- 2010
45. Matrilocal residence is ancestral in Austronesian societies
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Russell D. Gray, Fiona M. Jordan, Ruth Mace, and Simon J. Greenhill
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Male ,Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ,Population Dynamics ,Archaeological record ,Population ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Prehistory ,Sex Factors ,Cultural diversity ,Kinship ,Humans ,Marriage ,Social Behavior ,education ,History, Ancient ,Phylogeny ,Language ,General Environmental Science ,education.field_of_study ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Medicine ,Austronesian languages ,Markov Chains ,Genealogy ,Matrilocal residence ,Female ,Residence ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Monte Carlo Method ,Research Article - Abstract
The nature of social life in human prehistory is elusive, yet knowing how kinship systems evolve is critical for understanding population history and cultural diversity. Post-marital residence rules specify sex-specific dispersal and kin association, influencing the pattern of genetic markers across populations. Cultural phylogenetics allows us to practise ‘virtual archaeology’ on these aspects of social life that leave no trace in the archaeological record. Here we show that early Austronesian societies practised matrilocal post-marital residence. Using a Markov-chain Monte Carlo comparative method implemented in a Bayesian phylogenetic framework, we estimated the type of residence at each ancestral node in a sample of Austronesian language trees spanning 135 Pacific societies. Matrilocal residence has been hypothesized for proto-Oceanic society (ca3500 BP), but we find strong evidence that matrilocality was predominant in earlier Austronesian societiesca5000–4500 BP, at the root of the language family and its early branches. Our results illuminate the divergent patterns of mtDNA and Y-chromosome markers seen in the Pacific. The analysis of present-day cross-cultural data in this way allows us to directly address cultural evolutionary and life-history processes in prehistory.
- Published
- 2009
46. Testing evolutionary hypotheses about human biological adaptation using cross-cultural comparison
- Author
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Clare Holden, Fiona M. Jordan, and Ruth Mace
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Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Physiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Fertility ,Environment ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Human sex ratio ,Lactose Intolerance ,Humans ,Sex Ratio ,education ,Molecular Biology ,Phylogeny ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,Natural selection ,Ecology ,Phylogenetic comparative methods ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Biological Evolution ,Cross-cultural studies ,Variation (linguistics) ,Evolutionary biology ,Adaptation - Abstract
Physiological data from a range of human populations living in different environments can provide valuable information for testing evolutionary hypotheses about human adaptation. By taking into account the effects of population history, phylogenetic comparative methods can help us determine whether variation results from selection due to particular environmental variables. These selective forces could even be due to cultural traits-which means that gene-culture co-evolution may be occurring. In this paper, we outline two examples of the use of these approaches to test adaptive hypotheses that explain global variation in two physiological traits: the first is lactose digestion capacity in adults, and the second is population sex-ratio at birth. We show that lower than average sex ratio at birth is associated with high fertility, and argue that global variation in sex ratio at birth has evolved as a response to the high physiological costs of producing boys in high fertility populations.
- Published
- 2003
47. Language trees support the express-train sequence of Austronesian expansion
- Author
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Russell D. Gray and Fiona M. Jordan
- Subjects
Multidisciplinary ,Asia ,Phylogenetic tree ,Population Dynamics ,Australia ,Zoology ,Austronesian languages ,Biology ,Pacific Islands ,Biological Evolution ,Models, Biological ,Lexical item ,Linguistics ,Polynesia ,Inheritance (object-oriented programming) ,Tree (data structure) ,Archaeology ,Convergent evolution ,Darwin (ADL) ,Humans ,Phylogeny ,Ancestor ,Language - Abstract
Languages, like molecules, document evolutionary history. Darwin(1) observed that evolutionary change in languages greatly resembled the processes of biological evolution: inheritance from a common ancestor and convergent evolution operate in both. Despite many suggestions(2-4), few attempts have been made to apply the phylogenetic methods used in biology to linguistic data. Here we report a parsimony analysis of a large language data set. We use this analysis to test competing hypotheses - the "express-train''(5) and the "entangled-bank''(6,7) models - for the colonization of the Pacific by Austronesian-speaking peoples. The parsimony analysis of a matrix of 77 Austronesian languages with 5,185 lexical items produced a single most-parsimonious tree. The express-train model was converted into an ordered geographical character and mapped onto the language tree. We found that the topology of the language tree was highly compatible with the express-train model.
- Published
- 2000
48. Matrilocal residence is ancestral in Austronesian societies.
- Author
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Fiona M. Jordan
- Subjects
- *
MATRILOCAL residence , *PREHISTORIC peoples , *KINSHIP , *SOCIAL history , *PREHISTORIC anthropology , *PHYLOGENY , *AUSTRONESIAN languages , *MONTE Carlo method - Abstract
The nature of social life in human prehistory is elusive, yet knowing how kinship systems evolve is critical for understanding population history and cultural diversity. Post-marital residence rules specify sex-specific dispersal and kin association, influencing the pattern of genetic markers across populations. Cultural phylogenetics allows us to practise ‘virtual archaeology’ on these aspects of social life that leave no trace in the archaeological record. Here we show that early Austronesian societies practised matrilocal post-marital residence. Using a Markov-chain Monte Carlo comparative method implemented in a Bayesian phylogenetic framework, we estimated the type of residence at each ancestral node in a sample of Austronesian language trees spanning 135 Pacific societies. Matrilocal residence has been hypothesized for proto-Oceanic society (ca 3500 BP), but we find strong evidence that matrilocality was predominant in earlier Austronesian societies ca 5000–4500 BP, at the root of the language family and its early branches. Our results illuminate the divergent patterns of mtDNA and Y-chromosome markers seen in the Pacific. The analysis of present-day cross-cultural data in this way allows us to directly address cultural evolutionary and life-history processes in prehistory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Position-Reputation-Information (PRI) scale of individual prestige.
- Author
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Richard E W Berl, Alarna N Samarasinghe, Fiona M Jordan, and Michael C Gavin
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Prestige is a key concept across the social and behavioral sciences and has been implicated as an important driver in the processes governing human learning and behavior and the evolution of culture. However, existing scales of prestige fail to account for the full breadth of its potential determinants or focus only on collective social institutions rather than the individual-level perceptions that underpin everyday social interactions. Here, we use open, extensible methods to unite diverse theoretical ideas into a common measurement tool for individual prestige. Participants evaluated the perceived prestige of regional variations in accented speech using a pool of candidate scale items generated from free-listing tasks and a review of published scales. Through exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses, we find that our resulting 7-item scale, composed of dimensions we term position, reputation, and information ("PRI"), exhibits good model fit, scale validity, and scale reliability. The PRI scale of individual prestige contributes to the integration of existing lines of theory on the concept of prestige, and the scale's application in Western samples and its extensibility to other cultural contexts serves as a foundation for new theoretical and experimental trajectories across the social and behavioral sciences.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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