Cumulative culture spontaneously emerges in artificial navigators who are social and memory-guided
Edwin S. Dalmaijer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that cumulative cultural evolution can spontaneously emerge in simple artificial agents with minimal cognitive abilities, driven by social interaction and basic memory, without requiring advanced cognition.
Contribution
It shows that cumulative culture does not need sophisticated communication or cognition, emerging from simple social and memory-guided navigation in artificial agents.
Findings
Cumulative culture spontaneously emerged in agents with minimal cognitive architecture.
Social proximity and route memory are crucial for the emergence of cumulative culture.
Eliminating goal-direction reduced efficiency, but did not prevent cumulative culture.
Abstract
Cumulative cultural evolution occurs when adaptive innovations are passed down to consecutive generations through social learning. This process has shaped human technological innovation, but also occurs in non-human species. While it is traditionally argued that cumulative culture relies on high-fidelity social transmission and advanced cognitive skills, here I show that a much simpler system suffices. Cumulative culture spontaneously emerged in artificial agents who navigate with a minimal cognitive architecture of goal-direction, social proximity, and route memory. Within each generation, naive individuals benefitted from being paired with experienced navigators because they could follow previously established routes. Crucially, experienced navigators also benefitted from the presence of naive individuals through regression to the goal. As experienced agents followed their memorised…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Language and cultural evolution · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics
