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The Biology of Traditions
Models and Evidence
Biology of Traditions explores socially maintained traditions in a broad range of non-human animals.
Dorothy M. Fragaszy (Edited by), Susan Perry (Edited by)
9780521815970, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 3 July 2003
476 pages, 41 b/w illus. 21 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.7 cm, 0.8 kg
Review of the hardback: '… a rich and comprehensive volume, grounded in traditional ethology, that offers a timely complement to a library of volumes on social learning in animals. Fragaszy and Perry have assembled interesting and provocative contributions from some of the leading researchers in the field of social learning … we heartily recommend this book … much of the material in this book, and especially the first and last chapters, would be of value to any researcher working in the field.' Blackwell Verlag
Socially maintained behavioural traditions in non-human species hold great interest for biologists, anthropologists and psychologists. This book treats traditions in non-human species as biological phenomena that are amenable to the comparative methods of inquiry used in contemporary biology. Chapters in the first section define behavioural traditions, and indicate how they can arise in non-human species, how widespread they may be, how they may be recognized and how we can study them. The second part summarizes cutting-edge research programmes seeking to identify traditions in diverse taxa in contributions from leading researchers in this area. The book ends with a comparison and evaluation of the alternative theoretical formulations and their applications presented in the book, and lays out recommendations for future research building on the most promising evidence and lines of thinking. The Biology of Traditions will be essential reading for students and researchers in the fields of anthropology, biology and psychology.
Preface Dorothy Fragaszy and Susan Perry
1. Towards a biology of traditions Dorothy Fragaszy and Susan Perry
2. What the models say about social learning Kevin N. Laland and Jeremy R. Kendal
3. Relative brain size and the distribution of innovation and social learning across the non-human primates Simon M. Reader
4. Social learning about food in birds Louis Lefebvre and Julie Bouchard
5. The cue reliability approach to social transmission: designing tests for adaptive traditions Gwen Dewar
6. 'Traditional' foraging behaviors of Brown and Black rats (Rattus norvegicus and Rattus rattus) Bennett G. Galef Jr.
7. Food for thought: social learning and feeding behavior in Capuchin monkeys: insights from the laboratory Elisabetta Visalberghi and Elsa Addessi
8. Traditions in mammalian and avian vocal communication Vincent M. Janik and Peter J. B. Slater
9. Like mother, like calf: the ontogeny of foraging traditions in wild Indian Ocean Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) Janet Mann and Brooke Sargeant
10. Biological and ecological foundations of primate behavioral tradition Michael A. Huffman and Satoshi Hirata
11. Local traditions in orangutans and chimpanzees: social learning and social tolerance Carel P. van Schaik
12. Developmental perspectives on Great Ape tradition Anne E. Russon
13. Skilled foraging actions by Brown Capuchins in Suriname: are these socially supported and transmitted behaviors? Sue Boinski, Robert P. Quatrone, Karen Sughrue, Lara Selvaggi, MaLinda Henry, Claudia M. Stickler and Lisa M. Rose
14. Traditions in wild White-faced Capuchin monkeys Susan Perry, Melissa Panger, Lisa Rose, Mary Baker, Julie Gros-Louis, Katherine Jack, Katherine C. MacKinnon, Joseph Manson, Linda Fedigan and Kendra Pyle
15. Conclusions and research agendas Susan Perry
Further reading
Index.
Subject Areas: Human biology [PSX], Animal behaviour [PSVP], Evolution [PSAJ], Physical anthropology [JHMP]