ARETE INITIATIVE
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Defining Wisdom | A Project of the University of Chicago
Overview
News
Publications
Network
Discussions
Research
Contact Us
Defining Wisdom Home
>
Tags
Tag Search Results:
primates
Browse All Tags
NEWS
Sorry, we were unable to find any results using your search terms. Please change your search terms and try again.
PUBLICATIONS
Innovation in Wild Bornean Orangutans (Pongo Pygmaeus Wurmbii) (2006)
In most studies to date, innovations were studied if their origination was witnessed or if they arose in response to a pronounced environmental change, making it difficult to generalize. In this study, we use an operational definition developed by Ramsey et al. (MS) to design a procedure for recognizing...
(Something interesting I found) Posted by:
brendah
What Cultural Primatology Can Tell Anthropologists About the Evolution of Culture (2006)
This review traces the development of the field of cultural primatology from its origins in Japan in the 1950s to the present. The field has experienced a number of theoretical and methodological influences from diverse fields, including comparative experimental psychology, Freudian psychoanalysis, behavioral...
(Something interesting I found) Posted by:
brendah
Innovation and Social Learning: Individual Variation and Brain Evolution (2003)
This paper reviews behavioural, neurological and cognitive correlates of innovation at the individual, population and species level, focusing on birds and primates. Innovation, new or modified learned behaviour not previously found in the population, is the first stage in many instances of cultural transmission...
(Something interesting I found) Posted by:
brendah
A Model for Tool-Use Traditions in Primates: Implications for the Coevolution of Culture and Cognition (2003)
Inspired by the demonstration that tool-use variants among wild chimpanzees and orangutans qualify as traditions (or cultures), we developed a formal model to predict the incidence of these acquired specializations among wild primates and to examine the evolution of their underlying abilities. We assumed...
(Something interesting I found) Posted by:
brendah
Page 1 of 1 (4 items)
DISCUSSIONS
Sorry, we were unable to find any results using your search terms. Please change your search terms and try again.
Join the Network
Users are able to post wisdom-related news & publications, maintain a profile, and participate in discussion forums.
Login
|
Join
Related Tags
behavior
biological sciences
birds
brain evolution
chimpanzee
cognition
culture
evolutionn
human evolution
individual variation
Innovation
orangutan
Perry
Pradhan
Reader
social learning
socially biased learning
technology
tool use
traditions
van Noordwijk
van Schaik
Wich