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Human sociobiology 2

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Title: Human sociobiology 2


1
Human sociobiology (2)
  • MSc ACSB 2005/06
  • Session 16

2
HSB vs competing explanations
  • Kitcher Vaulting Ambition Chapter 9 Hypotheses
    Non Fingo
  • Is conventional wisdom (EFP) equally good?
  • SB predictions weak, or maths doesnt work
  • Dickemanns prediction of upper-caste female
    infanticide requires an unrealistically high
    bridegroom price, and maths predicts male
    infanticide in the middle and lower castes
  • Avunculate where childrens support is
    responsibility of the mothers brother, women
    should adopt the Calpurnia strategy

3
Why Mildred Dickemanns explanation of
infanticide among the Rajputs doesnt work
  • See Kitcher, p. 315
  • Indian societies polygyny hypergyny
  • Upper caste infanticide a striking fit to
    Trivers Willards predictions
  • Problems (I) Logical
  • Trivers-Willard model has no. of offspring
    constant, and offspring sex ratio shifts
  • Dickemann has daughters killed but ? are sons
    born to replace them
  • Economic not reproductive costs. Daughters cost
    money to rear and to marry-off

4
Dickemanns explanation of Rajput infanticide
doesnt work (II)
  • Problems (II) Marriage and rearing costs
  • For infanticide to be worthwhile (Kitcher),
    bridegroom price has to be unrealistically high
    (why not let daughters stay unmarried?)
  • Infanticide works in upper caste in model only if
    rearing/marriage costs so high that predict male
    infanticide in lower and middle castes
  • Wealth, power and influence, not Darwinian
    payoffs, are key to understanding the cultural
    practice of infanticide

5
Tibetan polyandry John Crook
  • Wife with 2 husbands, typically brothers
  • Farming in low-productivity environment
  • Ideal is 3 males cultivate, herd, trade
  • Farms passed down undivided to single family
  • Crook sought explanation in inclusive fitness
    if family size from joint paternity is above a
    certain threshold, sharing a wife can be
    explained by IF
  • p gt (2hm)/(h1),
  • where m children in monogamy, p children
    in polyandry, and h number of husbands assumes
    all husbands have equal chance of fathering the
    offspring

6
Tibetan polyandry (2)
  • Mean family sizes for polyandry
  • Major dwelling 1 2 3 4 mean
  • 3.8 4.8 4.7 9
    5.2 poly
  • Minor dwelling 2.0
    3.1 monog
  • Benefit in fitness units (0.25no_gchildren)
  • Monog Polyandry
  • Woman 3.3 4.3
  • Man 3.3 1.9
  • Crook assumes a Tasmanian Native Hen model of
    human polyandry

7
Tasmanian native hen
  • 2 males (brothers) breed with 1 female
  • Experienced pair, alone 1.1 young
  • Experienced pair, 1 helper 3.1 young
  • Benefit from helping 2.0 young
  • Helper (beta) is brother of breeder (alpha)
    achieves 1/3 of copulations
  • r(helper) is (1/3).5 (2/3).25 .33
  • r(breeder) is (2/3).5 (1/3).25 .42
  • For helper, 2.33 (.66) is gt 1.1.5 (.55)
  • For breeder, 2.42 (.84) is gt 1.1.5 (.55)

8
Tibetan polyandry (3)
  • But is this the right approach?
  • Assumes the Tasmanian Native Hen model
  • Alternative model I exploitation of family
  • White Fronted Bee-Eater model
  • Younger brothers in Tibet may have little
    leverage, so open to exploitation by parents/
    elder brothers
  • Alternative interpretation II non-random
    allocation of families to good/poor farms
  • Alternative explanation III society / taxation

9
Polyandry (4)
  • Non-random allocation of family-sizes to farms
  • Suppose
  • Largest marriages on very poor farms (where 1- or
    2-husband families cant survive)
  • Smallest marriages on best land (where viable)
  • Increase in offspring by adding extra husbands
    will be offset by the reduction in quality of the
    land so comparisons of N. children will be
    misleading
  • Cant perform the proper experimental study on
    humans - allocate marriages to farms at random,
    then look for a difference in average family size

10
Polyandry (5)
  • Taxation system requires each separate family
    unit to be above a certain productivity
    increase the number of members until viable, or
    reclaim it into the unit from which separate off
  • But kinship must increase stability of large
    family units, and youngest brothers can be
    exploited by kin (either elder brothers, or
    parents), so sociobiology can help us understand
    how these families work
  • See also Barrett et al, Human evolutionary
    psychology, p. 224-234

11
Societies with the avunculate are puzzles
  • In societies showing this arrangement (MoBr
    societies), the mothers brother, not the childs
    putative father, is responsible for the childs
    support. Kitcher P299 ff.
  • If women mate with many men, confidence that a
    child has been fathered by a particular male
    partner will be low. The womans brother
    (childs uncle) will have a low but certain
    relatedness to the child via its mother (his
    sister/ half sister), and this can justify the
    uncle rather than the father investing in its
    rearing
  • If p is prob. that a womans child is sired by
    her husband, Kitcher derives p2 4p 1 lt 0
    giving p0.268 as an equation defining a
    paternity threshold below which men should invest
    in nephews/nieces, not wifes children

12
The avunculate (2)
  • Kitcher considers the richest man in the society,
    then the next richest, etc. Each in turn is
    better to invest in nephews/nieces below this
    threshold
  • But why does a woman not adopt the Calpurnia
    strategy offer the wealthiest man to guarantee
    his paternity (be supervised by his female
    relatives) in return for his direct investment in
    her children this strategy would expand down the
    wealth chain once those at the top adopted it
  • But EPCs indicate benefits of multiple-mating.
    Are women who do this following a strategy to
    maximise the genetic diversity of the children,
    and guarantee survival of at least some in the
    face of epidemic disease or other biological
    hazards.

13
More than one female strategy?
  • Women may play a mixed strategy
  • Differences between behaviour of women who score
    high vs. low on scale of sociosexuality
  • Differences in womens preference between the
    period of high conception-risk and the rest of
    menstrual cycle. (Pill users resemble the latter)

14
Pupil sizes and mate choices
  • Tombs Silverman (2004) EHB 25, 221-228
  • Expanded pupils enhance attractiveness in both
    sexes
  • But some women prefer men with large pupils,
    others prefer medium pupils
  • Large-pupil preference linked to womens tendency
    to select bad boys rather than nice guys for
    dates
  • Suggests a strategy-differences among women in
    their response to the male attention/attraction
    implied by the largest pupil size
  • Some evidence (UoE, unpublished) that in
    high-fertility part of menstrual cycle, large
    pupils preferred

15
Womens rating of mens displays
  • Gangestad et al. (2004) Psychological Science
    15(3), 203-207
  • Men videoed in competitive date-choice context
    women see 1 min of video, rate man as for short-
    or long-term relationship
  • Social presence composed, athletic, eye contact,
    no self-deprecation, no downward gaze, doesnt
    present self as nice guy
  • Direct intra-sexual competitiveness e.g., slags
    off competitor, asserts superiority, not just
    himself, no laughter, doesnt say he has a nice
    personality
  • Composite Sp-Dic rating peaked at day 11 of
    menstrual cycle, but only for short-term
    relationships

16
Lonely hearts studies
  • Huge literature on what men and women want in a
    sexual partner as shown by offers and
    requirements in personal ads
  • Women ask for resources, offer good looks
  • Men ask for good looks, offer resources
  • Kindness, humour, etc., also important
  • Bressler (2006) EHB (two papers) Humorous or
    non-H autobiographical sketches -gt men produce,
    women judge
  • Women chose humorous males for relationships men
    preferred partners who appreciated their own
    humour, women preferred partners who produced
    humour sex difference less marked for short-term
    relationships and also for friendships

17
Chat-up lines
  • Bale et al (2006) PAID 40, 655-664
  • 40 vignettes a man tries to open conversation
    with a woman which openings were likely to
    work?
  • Humour, flattery, and blue remarks unlikely to be
    successful
  • Openings that show off character, culture and
    wealth rated more likely to succeed
  • See http//msnbc.msn.com/id/11333284/060214a

18
Geoff Miller the mating mind
  • Evolution of intelligence through sexual
    selection, not natural selection
  • But why intelligence, rather than athleticism/
    another index of quality, for partner choice?
  • Why are humour, kindness, and personality so
    important (to both sexes)?
  • What forms of intelligence are sexually most
    appealing/ unattractive?
  • Logic (Mr Spock)? Empathy? Verbal skills?
    Skill in making things? Creativity?
  • Women want to make cads into dads, but not dolts
  • Perhaps ask what is unpromising material as a mate

19
Honest signals to opposite and same sex
  • Risk-taking as a signal Farthing, 2005, EHB 26,
    171-185 risks were heroic, physical or from
    drugs
  • Women preferred heroic risk-taker over h.
    risk-avoider as mate men less strong effect
  • Men (not women) selected physical risk-takers for
    same-sex friendship
  • J Diamond (RFTC p. 180) Kung-Fu kerosene
    drinking as a test of advanced grade kung-fu.
    JDs informant was grade 8 can single-handedly
    fight off 8 attackers. Alcohol, tobacco, etc may
    show up quality, and may be within-sex signals

20
SB may not predict the most important social
processes
  • Variation in societies needs explanation
  • Not a close link between adaptation and success
    at the level of societies
  • Early farming was linked to lower quality of life
    than for hunter-gatherers only replaced the old
    system at 1000 yards p.a., but impossible to
    revert once it had arrived (RFTC p. 163)

21
J. Diamond Guns, germs and steel
  • GGS follows up parts 4-5 of RFTC.
  • Why was New Guinea (etc.) invaded and conquered
    by travellers from Europe, rather than Europe
    conquered by travellers from PNG (etc.)
  • Role of disease, etc. in reducing ability of New
    World or Australasian populations to resist
    Europeans
  • Different orientation of the continents
    facilitates/ inhibits spread of farming other
    skills
  • Luck determines number of plant and animal spp.
    suitable for domestication and their utility,
    especially as beasts of burden
  • 2º reduction in social complexity in Australian
    outback

22
References
  • Kitcher Vaulting ambition
  • Betzig Human reproductive behaviour
  • Miller The mating mind
  • Diamond The rise and fall of the third chimanzee
  • Diamond Guns, germs and steel
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