ExLibris header image
SFX Logo
Title: Hunter-gatherer multilevel sociality accelerates cumulative cultural evolution
Source:

Science Advances [2375-2548] Migliano, Andrea yr:2020


Collapse list of basic services Basic
Full text
Full text available via PubMed Central
GO
Document delivery
Request document via Library/Bibliothek GO
Users interested in this article also expressed an interest in the following:
1. Creanza, N. "Cultural evolutionary theory: How culture evolves and why it matters." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 114.30: 7782-7789. Link to SFX for this item
2. "Brain size growth in Australopithecus." Journal of human evolution. 130: 72-82. Link to SFX for this item
3. Salali, Gul D. "Knowledge-Sharing Networks in Hunter-Gatherers and the Evolution of Cumulative Culture." Current biology 26.18 (2016): 2516-2521. Link to SFX for this item
4. Discamps, E. "Intra-Site Variability in the Still Bay Fauna at Blombos Cave: Implications for Explanatory Models of the Middle Stone Age Cultural and Technological Evolution." PLoS One 10.12 (2015). Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
5. Dyble, M. "Sex equality can explain the unique social structure of hunter-gatherer bands." Science 348.6236 (2015): 796-798. Link to SFX for this item
6. Richerson, Peter J. "New frontiers in the study of human cultural and genetic evolution." Current opinion in genetics & development 29C.C (2014): 103-109. Link to SFX for this item
7. Skerry, Amy E. "The origins of pedagogy: Developmental and evolutionary perspectives." Evolutionary psychology 11.3 (2013): 550-72. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
8. Grosjean, P. "Persistent effect of sex ratios on relationship quality and life satisfaction." Philosophical transactions - Royal Society. Biological sciences 372.1729 (2017): 20160315-20160315. Link to SFX for this item
9. El Mouden, C. "Cultural transmission and the evolution of human behaviour: a general approach based on the Price equation." Journal of evolutionary biology 27.2 (2013): 231-241. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
10. van, Dorothy M. P. "Local traditions in oragutans and chimpanzees: Social learning and social tolerance." 2003. 297-328. Link to SFX for this item
11. Mitani, John C. "Bernard Chapais: Primeval kinship. How pair-bonding gave birth to human society." Primates 50.1 (2009): 91-93. Link to SFX for this item
12. Kaplan, Hillard S. "The evolutionary and ecological roots of human social organization." Philosophical transactions - Royal Society. Biological sciences 364.1533 (2009): 3289-3299. Link to SFX for this item
13. Hill, K. "Why Do Men Hunt?" Current anthropology 50.1 (2009): 51-74. Link to SFX for this item
14. Navarrete, A. "Energetics and the evolution of human brain size." Nature 480.7375 (2011): 91-93. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
15. Isler, K. "How humans evolved large brains : Comparative evidence." Evolutionary anthropology 23.2 (2014): 65-75. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
16. Rahman, Q. "The extended evolutionary synthesis and the role of soft inheritance in evolution." Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Scie 279.1740 (2012): 2913-2921. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
17. Currie, Thomas E. "Analyses do not support the parasite-stress theory of human sociality." Behavioral and brain sciences 35.2 (2012): 83-85. Link to SFX for this item
18. Penner, Stephanie L. Brown;R Michael Brown;Louis L. MOVING BEYOND SELF-INTEREST: PERSPECTIVES FROM EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, NEUROSCIENCE AND THE SOCIAL SCIENCES. 2012. Link to SFX for this item
19. Richerson, J. "The cultural niche: Why social learning is essential for human adaptation." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108.Suppl 2 (2011): 10918-10925. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
View More...
View Less...
Select All Clear All

Expand list of advanced services Advanced