Evolutionary Psychology • Scientific study of human behaviour, brain, mind within an evolutionary context • Relatively new as actual academic discipline • Principles have been around for long time • Not a sub-discipline of psychology, but a general theoretical approach Humans’ Place • Humans are animals • But are they special animals? • “Gradual” vs. “recent” development of modern human characteristics • Bias, agenda Mammalian Social Organization • • • • • Milk production Mother-offspring association Matrilineal cross-generational bonds Females are the limiting resource Polygyny and monogamy Milestones major advance in tool agricultural revolution manufacture; the origin of modern humans first cities (6k) Mousterian (200k) in Africa (200k?) Industrial Revolution (150) first evidence of art (70k) controlled use of fire (~800k) technological revolution (25) present evidence of meat eating becomes strong 0.01 million 0.1 million grinding wild grains for baking (25k) 1 million Major advance in tool manufacture; the Achulean 2 million Homo erectus expands out of Africa earliest-known stone tools, Africa origin of brain expansion 3 million Adapted from: Leakey (1994) earliest-known fossils origin of bipedalism (A. afarensis Homo sp.?) in Africa 4 million 5 million 10 million Australopithecine Homo habilis Homo erectus Homo Neanderthalensis ~ 3.5-2.7 myr Brain size: 650 cc ~2.4-1.7 myr Brain size: 800 cc ~1.7-0.3 myr ~250-45 kyr Brain size: 900 cc Brain size: 1400cc Image sources: http://www.archaeologyinfo.com, http://paleodirect.com/, http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/eurydice.jpg Broad “Assumptions” of EP • Brain is physical system • Psychological systems (neuronal, cognitive, behavioural) adaptively selected for problems faced by our ancestors in Environment of Evolutionary Adaptiveness • Selective pressures have produced cognitive modularity Brain is a Physical System • • • • Materialism Brain is a physical organ Activity of brain is “the mind” Evolution typically used to study physical adaptation • But behaviours derived from brain, so evolution can be applied here, too Adaptive Selection • Environment of Evolutionary Adaptiveness (EEA) – Period of evolutionary pressures on human ancestors prior to about 10000 years ago • Selected and shaped species-specific traits seen in modern humans • Because of changes in environment, some of these traits may no longer be well suited to the modern environment Modularity • Fodor (1983), The Modularity of Mind • Small, independent, impenetrable units • Generally applied by EP not only to perceptual systems, but to cognitive and behavioural ones as well (more on this later…) Levels of Causation • • • • Proximate (or Mechanistic) Developmental (or Ontogenetic) Phylogenetic (or Historic) Ultimate (or Functional) • • • • • Food sharing between family members Breast feeding Monogamy Language Sibling rivalry Levels of Causation • Different areas of science operate at different levels • Very different explanations may all be correct, just at different causative levels • Even sub-disciplines of psychology operate at different levels • Depending on the topic of focus, EP may also be operating at different levels History of Evolutionary Theory • Did not start with Charles Darwin • All evolutionary theories address: “how do organisms change with time?” and “how do new organisms develop?” • Greeks – Thales and Empedocles: change across generations – Aristotle: strict, rigid hierarchy • Francis Bacon (1561-1626) – Novum organum (1620); variation across generations • Gottried Leibniz (1646-1716) – Ammonites & nautilus; environment causes change • George Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (17071788) – Adaptation to fit environment – e.g., N.Am bison from ox • Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) – Apes could develop the abilities of reasoning beings • Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802) – Single source of beginning of life – Competition as driving force of evolution – Sexual reproduction, The Botanic Garden • Baron Georges Cuvier (17691832) – Catastrophism: periodic extinction of species • Jean-Baptiste Lamarck – – – – Gives mechanism for evolutionary change Movement towards higher forms Individuals change during lifespan Inheritance of acquired characteristics (i.e., changes passed to offspring) Charles Darwin • Lots of geology and entomology • Voyage of the Beagle (18311836) • Existence of adaptations • Read Malthus’ Essay on the Principle of Population – Not everyone can survive Darwinian/Natural Selection • 1837: started notebook on “transformation of species” • On the Origin of Species (1859) • Variation, inheritance, selection • Provided causal mechanism • Selection – Artificial, natural, sexual • Not intentional, gradual, differential reproductive success Alfred Wallace Requirements of Evolution • Heritable variation • Differential reproductive success Gregor Mendel • “Founder” of modern genetics • Experiments with pea plants (also fuschia, maise, etc.) • Particulate inheritance • “Gene” • Darwin didn’t know anything about this… Social Darwinism • Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) – – – – Applied evolution to everything Animals, human mind, society “Survival of the fittest” Directed, purposeful • Helping the weak limits society – Government should not be involved in social programs • Appreciated by 19th C. American industrialists – e.g., “The growth of a large business is merely survival of the fittest…” (J.D. Rockefeller) – e.g., “All is well since all grows better.” (A. Carnegie) Francis Galton • Charles Darwin’s cousin • Developer of modern field of psychometrics • Early use of twin studies to understand heritability of intelligence (Hereditary Genius) • Argued traits from EEA useful in modern period (e.g., social nature, gregariousness) • Eugenics movement Eugenics • • • • • • Improve society by selective breeding Not a new idea, e.g., Greek city state Sparta Herbert Spencer Hitler Alberta Eugenics Board Environment changes; necessary to predict future… Evolved Instincts • William James • Humans possess inherited, evolved instincts • But environment and learning can modify many “instinctive” behaviours • Now, better to say “biological predispositions” Standard Social Science Model (SSSM) • Nature vs. Nurture issue • Shift to importance of environmental factors in behavioural regulation • Early Behaviorists, developmental and social psychology • Tabula rasa, total modifiability, culture as autonomous force, behaviour via general learning rules Nature via Nurture • Much of psychology studied at proximate level of causation • Genetic and Environmental interaction is a constant Sociobiology • E.O. Wilson • Behaviours affect reproductive success, and behaviours influenced by genes • Ergo, evolutionary selection has helped shape human behaviour • Fears of a new social Darwinism Risks for EP • Teleological assumptions; evolution has no “end-goal” • Assuming all modern traits must be derived from selected-for adaptations • Arguing without sufficient evidence (“justso stories”) Solutions • Study gene-environment-behaviour interactions – Behavioural genetics (won’t indicate if a trait is an adaptation, though) • Comparative approach – Cross-species comparisons • Cross-cultural approach – Behavioural “universals” across time and space; complicated due to environmental contingencies • Mathematical and computational modeling – Genetic algorithms, game theory, neural networks Misconceptions about EP • A variety of misunderstandings • Many derive from a broader misinterpretation of general evolutionary theory Everything is an Adaptation • Not all present traits must have been adaptively selected • Spandrel – Non-adaptive trait as side-effect of an adaptive one • Exaptation – Trait shaped by evolution for a specific purpose that is subsequently coopted for a new use • Sensory bias – Trait as side-effect of sensory/perceptual system EP is Deterministic • “Genetic determinism” • Remember, genetics interacts with environment • Actually, relatively low heritability of many behavioural traits • Effects of learning very significant • E.g., Abbey (1982), Buss (1994): woman smiles, man misinterprets EP is Reductionistic • Reductionism: taking something down to its most constituent parts • Sometimes rather absurd • Levels of causation • Certain degree of reductionism very useful in science EP Argues for Optimal Design • No organism is fully optimized • Evolution: “good enough” to last long enough to reproduce • Evolutionary time-lag – E.g., clogged arteries and heart attacks • Costs of adaptation – E.g., fear of snakes and spiders, not cars EP is Politically Incorrect • Science • Social-cultural elements Field in Progress • EP is a developing field • Disagreement over underlying theory EP, Santa Barbara Style • Late 1980s - early 1990s, Leda Cosmides & John Tooby • University of California, Santa Barbara – Center for Evolutionary Psychology • Formalized the developing field of EP – Adapted Mind (1992) • • • • Universal human trait adaptations EEA; slow evolutionary development Cognitive modules Currently, most well-known and popular(ized) Universal Traits • Politically correct – Specter of sociobiology – Avoids claims of racism • Cognitive psychology – Specific link between cognition and genes not well understood – Physiology and (some) gene interactions better understood • Therefore, look for pan-human attributes Slow Evolution • Older biology, evolution, genetics operated on assumption of slow evolutionary change • Made Pleistocene mind in modern body assumption reasonable • Modern research challenging this Hawks et al. (2007) • Linkage disequilibrium study of the HapMap genotype data set • Recent selection (within last 10,000 years) on 1800 human genes – Ascertained selected variants – About 7% of human genes • Indicates that human evolution has actually increased over last 50,000 years – Population increase, cultural development, ecological modification Wang et al. (2006) • Identified biological functional categories for recently (less than 40,000 years) selected human gene function • Non-random (indicating specific human relevant selection pressures) • Pathogen-host interaction, reproduction, DNA metabolism, cell cycle, protein metabolism, and neuronal function • Neuron function includes genes for: – Serotonin transporter, glutamate and glycine receptors, olfactory receptors, synapse-associated proteins, and numerous brain-expressed genes with largely, as yet, unknown function Cognitive Modules • Idea that specific brain “units” have evolved for specific, ancestral tasks • Little/no change from ancestral form • Each module for single function • Cognitive science argues for brain as general pattern classifier • More on this later in course… Popularized • Evolutionary psychology; catchy name • Santa Barbara school the early adopter • Numerous popular-press books Caveat • Issues with some underlying assumptions do not invalidate value of applying evolutionary theory to psychological topics! • Scientists (in any field) frequently debate assumptions, findings, and interpretations • Other evolutionary approaches Human Behavioural Ecology (HBE) • Applies principles of evolutionary theory and optimization to human behavioural and cultural diversity • Early roots in ethology and sociobiology • Modern HBE studies evolution and adaptive design in ecological context Dual Inheritance Theory (DIT) • Culture and genes provide separate, but linked, systems of inheritance and variation • Cultural information affected by natural selection, decision making (genetic and/or culturally evolved preferences) and transmitter influence • Often utilize explicit mathematical models Summary Comparison HBE EP DIT Explanatory Focus Behavioural strategies Psychological mechanisms Cultural evolution Key Constraints Ecological, material Cognitive, genetic Structural, information Temporal Scale of Adaptive Change Short-term (phenotypic) Long-term (genetic) Medium-term (cultural) Expected Current Adaptiveness Highest Lowest Intermediate Hypothesis Generation Optimality and ESS models Informal inference Population-level models Primary Hypothesis Testing Methods Quantitative ethnographic observation Survey, laboratory experiment Mathematical modeling and simulation From: Winterhalder & Smith (2000) EP, HBE, DIT • Traditionally viewed as competing fields – Different assumptions, analytic methods, alliances with other disciplines, academic politics • Increasing recognition of complementary integration – Take advantage of different study methodologies, empirical foci, time scales of adaptation, behavioural domains • Limits to complementarity – The same behaviour can’t simultaneously be the product of each field’s underlying assumptions – But, different these field’s hypotheses could be simultaneously true for different behaviours