The Evolution of Imitation Without Cultural Transmission
Lee Altenberg, Susanne Still, and Christopher J. Watkins

TL;DR
This paper models how imitation can evolve without cultural transmission, showing that anti-imitation and imitation can emerge purely through natural selection in phenotypic plasticity, leading to complex evolutionary dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a model where imitation evolves independently of cultural transmission, revealing novel phenomena like anti-imitation and overshooting in phenotypic evolution.
Findings
Anti-imitation favored during directional selection
Imitation can overshoot the phenotypic optimum
Only anti-imitation evolves under purifying selection
Abstract
The evolution and function of imitation have always been placed within the confines of animal learning and associated with its crucial role in cultural transmission and cultural evolution. Can imitation evolve as a form of phenotypic plasticity in the absence of cultural transmission, in phenotypes beyond behavior? We investigate a model in which imitation is unbundled from cultural transmission: an organism's adult phenotype is plastically altered by its experiences as a juvenile of other juveniles' genetically determined traits. The only information transmitted between generations is genetic. We find that during a period of directional selection towards a phenotypic optimum, natural selection favors modifiers which cause an organism to bias its plastic phenotype in the direction opposite to the mean phenotype of the population -- anti-imitation. As the population approaches the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Language and cultural evolution
