Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Gillian R. Brown , L.G. Rapaport , Jonathan Liljeblad
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Clemson University
ANO 2008
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Evolutionary Anthropology
ISSN 1060-1538
E-ISSN 1520-6505
EDITORA Sage Publications (United States)
DOI 10.1002/evan.20180
CITAÇÕES 12
ARQUIVOS 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 E8D19E14251EBCE0BF181666C60D50BF
MD5 304bb8b6ad5cb24ccb9cfa0777bb9ca1

Resumo

Human infants rely on social interactions to acquire food‐related information.1, 2 Adults actively teach children about food through culturally diverse feeding practices. Characteristics we share with the other primates, such as complex diets, highly social lives, and extended juvenile periods, suggest that social learning may be important during ontogeny throughout the order. Although all young primates typically pay attention to feeding adults, great apes and callitrichids, in particular, acquire new foraging techniques through abilities unknown in other nonhuman primates; that is, they learn by imitation. However, ape social learning is almost exclusively infant‐initiated, while adult callitrichids actively teach their young. It is unlikely that the same selective forces have acted to favor sophisticated social‐learning mechanisms in both taxa.3, 4 Equipped with an ape brain, complex foraging methods, and a cooperative infant‐care system, early hominins were uniquely poised to take social learning about food and foraging techniques to a new level.

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