Human Overview Flashcards

1
Q

What are human traits that are unique compared to other primates?

A

1) Bipedalism
2) Aerobic endurance capacity
3) Bigger brains
4) More hypercooperative/prosocial and less aggressive

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2
Q

What is aggression?

A

An adaptive strategy among most primates to increase reproductive success

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3
Q

Who were the first hominins?

A

1) Ardipithecus ramidus (4.4 mya)
2) Australopithecus afarensis (LUCY) (3.5 mya)

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4
Q

Describe the characteristics of Ardipithecus ramidus

A

1) Bipedal in the trees and on the ground (divergent hallux)
2) Chimpanzee-sized brain

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5
Q

Describe the characteristics of Australopithecus afarensis (LUCY)?

A

1) Human traits from the waist-down (bipedalism)
2) Chimpanzee traits from the waist up (brain, gut size)
3) High sexual dimorphism in body size but not in canines

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6
Q

What is shared intentionality?

A

1) Ability and motivation to engage with others in collaborative, cooperative activities with joint goals and intention
2) The source of all cognitive achievements

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7
Q

What does Rousseau say about human nature?

A

Humans are naturally cooperative and unaggressive, where aggression only arose with civilization

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8
Q

What does Hobbes say about human nature?

A

Humans are naturally competitive and violent, where stronger governments are required to tame human instincts

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9
Q

What are the 2 types of aggression?

A

1) Reactive
2) Proactive

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10
Q

What is reactive aggression?

A

Sudden (often in response to fear or contest), where the target can easily be switched

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11
Q

What is proactive aggression?

A

Pre-planned according to desire, with a fixed target

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12
Q

What happened during human evolution in terms of aggression?

A

Reactive aggression has been reduced and proactive aggression is more prominent

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13
Q

What did Hill and Hurtado observe with the Ache (hunter-gatherer) foragers?

A

In the 17 years they were there, they never observed a scuffle between Ache men

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14
Q

What is the rate of male “scuffles” in human males vs chimpanzees?

A

Human males “scuffle” at ~1/1000th of the chimpanzee rate

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15
Q

What is self-domestication?

A

Evolution of a reduced propensity for reactive aggression (compared to an immediate ancestor) without the active involvement of another species

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16
Q

What is the domestication syndrome?

A

Domesticated animals tend to look a particular way, even though those phenotypic traits are not directly selected for (pleiotropy)

17
Q

What may indirectly occur when we select for reduced aggression, fear, and stress response in animals?

A

1) Reduced brain size
2) Reduced muzzles, smaller teeth
3) White patches

18
Q

For bonobos, where reduced aggression has been selected for, what are the associated unselected traits?

A

1) Shorter canines
2) Cranio-facial feminization (reduced sexual dimorphism)
3) Paedomorphic (juvenile-like) characteristics: white tuft maintained later, later development of inhibition, pink lips

19
Q

What is the anatomical evidence to suggest that humans were self-domesticated?

A

AMH have smaller teeth, a flatter bow ridge, more circular crania, reduced jaw projection, a smaller brain, paedomorphic behaviour, reduced sexual dimorphism

20
Q

What is central place foraging?

A

Not seen in any other primate, where food is brought back to share at a central place (must exhibit inhibition to not eat the food beforehand)

21
Q

What is intergenerational food transfer?

A

Widespread food sharing of hard-to-acquire food

22
Q

How is egalitarianism maintained in some hunter-gatherer societies?

A

Cooling the heart of the hunter (humbling hunters)

23
Q

What is counter-dominance/reverse dominance?

A

Lower ranking animals teaming up on an upstart or bully through coordinated action, typically requiring language to coordinate attack

24
Q

Is counter-dominance/reverse dominance possible in baboons/chimpanzees?

A

No - they cannot coordinate amongst themselves

25
Q

What can counter-dominance/reverse dominance result in?

A

Sanctions or capital punishment

26
Q

Who tends to be the victims of capital punishment in small-scale societies?

A

Aggressors and non-cooperators (mostly males)

27
Q

How do hunter-gatherer societies deal with unrelenting bullies?

A

Capital punishment (which requires approval of the group)

28
Q

What is the mechanisms by which humans have evolved reduced reactive aggression?

A

Used proactive aggression to combat individual displays of reactive aggression