Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/22041
Title: Social information use and social information waste
Authors: Morin, O
Jacquet, PO
Vaesen, K
Acerbi, A
Keywords: egocentric discounting;social learning;cultural evolution;imitation;epistemic vigilance;information cascades;conformity;advice-taking;judge-advisor-system
Issue Date: 17-May-2021
Publisher: Royal Society
Citation: Morin, O., Jacquet, P.O., Vaesen, K. and Acerbi, A. (2021) 'Social information use and social information waste', Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 376, 1828, pp. 1-9. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0615.
Abstract: © 2021 The Author(s). Social information is immensely valuable. Yet we waste it. The information we get from observing other humans and from communicating with them is a cheap and reliable informational resource. It is considered the backbone of human cultural evolution. Theories and models focused on the evolution of social learning show the great adaptive benefits of evolving cognitive tools to process it. In spite of this, human adults in the experimental literature use social information quite inefficiently: they do not take it sufficiently into account. A comprehensive review of the literature on five experimental tasks documented 45 studies showing social information waste, and four studies showing social information being over-used. These studies cover ‘egocentric discounting’ phenomena as studied by social psychology, but also include experimental social learning studies. Social information waste means that human adults fail to give social information its optimal weight. Both proximal explanations and accounts derived from evolutionary theory leave crucial aspects of the phenomenon unaccounted for: egocentric discounting is a pervasive effect that no single unifying explanation fully captures. Cultural evolutionary theory's insistence on the power and benefits of social influence is to be balanced against this phenomenon.
Description: One contribution of 15 to a theme issue ‘Foundations of cultural evolution’ compiled and edited by Eva Boon, Lucas Molleman, Pieter van den Berg and Franz J. Weissing
Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5372456.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/22041
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0615
ISSN: 0962-8436
Appears in Collections:Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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FullText.pdf© 2021 The Author(s). Published by the Royal Society under licence (https://royalsociety.org/-/media/journals/author/Royal-Society-Open-Access-Licence-to-Publish-12102018.pdf). This is an accepted manuscript. The published version may differ from it. Please cite as: Morin, O., Jacquet, P.O., Vaesen, K. and Acerbi, A. (2021) 'Social information use and social information waste', Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 376, 1828, pp. 1-9. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0615.252.83 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


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