SOMICS Workshop on
‘Ostensive communication, social learning, and cultural transmission
in small-scale and large-scale societies’
15 October, Room 101
Program
9.00-10.30 Barry S. Hewlett - ‘Social learning among hunter-gatherers’
Tanya Broesch – ‘Social learning in small-scale societies’
10.30-11.00 coffee break
11.00-12.30 Mikołaj Hernik - ‘Infant-directed speech helps disambiguating the content of
ostensive referential communication for human infants’
Kata Oláh, Ildikó Király ‘Natural Pedagogy and the core processes of learning and acting
in social groups’
12.30-14.00 Lunch with Poster Session in room 102
14.00-15.30 Michelle Klein – ‘How to learn about teaching’
Tara Callaghan – ‘Children acquiring the ways of their groups:
cultural developmental studies of imitation, pictorial symbols, pretense, and fairness’
15.30-16.00 coffee break
16.00-17.30 Philippe Rochat – ‘Possession psychology factoring culture and
development’
Vlad Naumescu – ‘Pedagogies of prayer: Teaching orthodoxy in South India’
17.30 Dan Sperber – Closing remarks
Abstracts
Social Learning Among Hunter-Gatherers
Barry S. Hewlett
Washington State University, Vancouver
Little is known about social learning in hunter-gatherers. More books and articles exist
on great ape social learning than exist on hunter-gatherer social learning. Most studies
of social or cultural learning in small-scale cultures (sometime called “traditional” or
“preindustrial” cultures) come for subsistence farmers. This talk provides a brief
overview of several current studies of social learning among hunter-gatherers. Topics
covered include: a cross-cultural survey of social learning in hunter-gatherers, field
studies of teaching in infancy and overimiation in 4 to 7 year olds, a field study of how
forager adolescents use selected trust to learn to spear hunt, and an ethnographic study
of forager views of social learning. The overview discusses how forager culturally
constructed niches (e.g., foundational schema, physical and social setting, cultural
practices) influence social learning.
Social Learning in Small-Scale Societies
Tanya Broesch
Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC
Ethnographic reports of teaching and learning across the globe are in contrast with
current theories of social learning – specifically Natural Pedagogy. Reports indicate that
observation and imitation are the primary forms of learning across the globe, suggesting
that direct teaching is specific to Western or urban societies where there is an emphasis
on formal education. Current theories of social learning suggest that direct teaching in
the form of ostensive cues (natural pedagogy) is critical/central to cumulative cultural
evolution, facilitating the transmission of complex information across generations with
high fidelity. Not only do ethnographic reports indicate that direct teaching is rare,
they also suggest that the learner is responsible for learning in non-Western and
small-scale societies with adults producing little to no face-to-face interaction with
infants and little regard for an infant or young child as a person capable of learning.
Lastly, there are strong cultural norms against adults modifying their behavior in
child-like ways. These reports challenge existing theories of the universality of natural
pedagogy and the use of ostensive cues to direct attention during a learning situation. I
sought to investigate these reports with a multi-method, cross-cultural approach. Using
natural and structured observations, interviews and experimental techniques, I examined
parent-infant and parent-child interactions in traditional, small-scale villages in Tanna,
Vanuatu and in urban Vancouver, Canada as well as a unique society in Tanna living in
similar ways to traditional villages yet rejecting formal education and Westernization. I
report commonalities across societies in parental behavior modification (acoustic
modification, affect mirroring, ostensive cues), yet societal differences in the behavior
form. I will present these findings as well as discuss ongoing and planned collaborations
for a close systematic examination of natural observations across diverse human societies.
Infant-directed Speech Helps Disambiguating the Content of
Ostensive Referential Communication for Human Infants
Mikołaj Hernik & Gergely Csibra
Central European University, Budapest
I will present two recent series of studies investigating the role of infant-directed
speech (IDS) in disambiguating the content of ostensive communication for human infants.
First series shows that IDS alone enables 6-month-olds to extract directional information
from highly ambiguous dynamic luminance-patterns that are typical of the human eye. These
results suggest a critical role of IDS in very early sensitivity to the deictic
referential gesture of gaze-shift, which allows for finding the referent of communication.
Second series of studies with 13.5-month-olds shows that IDS facilitates encoding of newly
demonstrated functions of novel tools as their enduring generic - rather then transient
episodic - properties. These results suggest that IDS plays a role in disambiguating the
scope of demonstrations and further in stabilizing cultural knowledge. Together the
results are consistent with the view that human infants are well equipped to receive
ostensive referential communication and that one function of IDS, among other ostensive
signals, may be facilitating sensory-motor responses and cognitive processes that enable
fixing the referent and encoding the communicated content as generic knowledge.
Natural Pedagogy and The Core Processes of Learning and Acting
in Social Groups
Oláh Kata, Ildikó Király
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Extended research has supported the idea that the capacity to represent and think in
social categories constitutes a fundamental characteristic of the human cognitive system;
even human infants and young children are sensitive to the boundaries of certain social
groups. However, the function this capacity serves is still debated. A novel proposal to
explain this phenomenon is that during social categorization the human mind aims at
mapping out social groups defined by a certain set of shared knowledge. Foremost, as a
basic mechanism, ostensive communicative signals induce universal epistemic trust and
openness in order to learn from social partners. However as the role of Natural Pedagogy
is to transmit culturally relevant knowledge, we believe, children should become sensitive
to the cues of shared knowledge to maximize the benefit of teaching situations. Thus we
assume the categorization of potential ‘teachers’ has important epistemic advantages for
humans, most prominently at the beginning of their life: the identification of reliable
sources of information for the sake of cultural knowledge acquisition.
The presentation will focus on a set of empirical studies that are in line with the above
proposal: these studies underline that children are ready to selectively trust and learn
from in-group teachers when their demonstration involves culturally determined
information’
How to Learn about Teaching
Michelle Kline
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University
Despite a growing interest in the theoretical importance of pedagogy, or teaching, in
human cultural learning and social development, the form and function of human teaching
behaviors outside of Western classrooms is not well understood. In fact, cultural
anthropologists continue to argue that teaching is rare outside the West, while
researchers in child development and psychology assume that pedagogy is a human universal.
The present study uses a novel typology of teaching behavior that includes both
Western-style classroom teaching and more subtle, everyday teaching behaviors. These
behaviors are united as “teaching” in that they all evolved as behaviors that facilitate
learning in others, yet they differ in the specific learning problems they solve. The
evidence I present shows that informal teaching is present and commonplace in these Fijian
villages, and that the costs and benefits to teachers and pupils pattern teaching
behaviors within and between relationships. This study lays the theoretical and
methodological groundwork for future comparative studies of variation in teaching
behaviors across human populations, social relationships, and the life course.
Children Acquiring the Ways of their Groups: Cultural Developmental Studies of Imitation,
Pictorial Symbols, Pretense, and Fairness
Tara Callaghan
St. Francis Xavier University, NS, Canada
I will present selected findings from a decade of cultural developmental research
investigating children’s early social cognitive abilities, symbolic functioning
(pictorial, pretense), and prosociality. This work bridges fundamental questions of human
communication and cooperation. An underlying theme of the talk will be how the research
examines the foundational mechanisms underlying cultural transmission of these human
behaviors, and where there are gaps in our understanding of the mechanisms.
Possession Psychology Factoring Culture and Development
Philippe Rochat
Emory University, Atlanta, GA
Moral concerns do arise primarily from issues around possession. Possession psychology is
indeed central to morality. Depending on culture, kids grow under various pressures to
own and protect possession. However, universally, once one has invested his own personal
effort into something, be it physical or purely psychological, this investment makes such
something “his”. It gives rise to an irresistible sense of ownership and entitlement. In
turn, such sense opens up the possibility of bartering, gifting, sharing, stealing, and in
general, the possibility of social exchanges as well the negotiation of value and the
construction of a consensus around the equivalence of increasingly disparate (hard to
compare) things. It also gives rise, from the second year of life to social tallying: the
possibility of social debt creation and tracking, reputation management which, I will
propose, is a major trademark of our self-conscious species. I shall review empirical
evidence both illustrating and supporting such general assertions.
Pedagogies of Prayer: Teaching Orthodoxy in South India
Vlad Naumescu
Central European University, Budapest
This talk explores pedagogies of prayer among St. Thomas Christians in South India
describing shifts in their epistemic stance and their effect on social learning. More than
other religious traditions Orthodoxy is centered on 'mysteries' and the claim that
meaning is beyond human grasp. Unlike ritual performance which remains opaque and prone to
overimitation, Sunday school teaching is centered on explanation and text-based learning.
Looking at the contexts and types of explanation it provides, I suggest that rather than
inviting a form of Socratic learning this exegetical explanation is meant to reproduce the
‘mystery’ at the core of religious knowledge.
Csaba Pleh
dist. visiting professor
CEU Department of Cognitive Science
1051 Budapest
Nádor utca 9
Office. Oktober 6 u. 9 I. 104
Vispleh(a)ceu.edu
36(30)3493735
www.plehcsaba.hu
member Academia Europaea and HAS