Neighbours and relatives: accounting for spatial distribution when testing causal hypotheses in cultural evolution**

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Authors

Bromham, Lindell
Yaxley, Keaghan

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Cambridge University Press

Abstract

Many important and interesting hypotheses about cultural evolution are evaluated using cross-cultural correlations: if knowing one particular feature of a culture (e.g. environmental conditions such as temperature, humidity or parasite load) allows you to predict other features (e.g. language features, religious beliefs, cuisine), it is often interpreted as indicating a causal link between the two (e.g. hotter climates carry greater disease risk which encourages belief in supernatural forces and favours use of antimicrobial ingredients in food preparation; dry climates make production of distinct tones more difficult). But testing such hypotheses from cross-cultural comparisons requires us to take proximity of cultures into account: nearby cultures share many aspects of their environment and are more likely to be similar in many culturally-inherited traits. This can generate indirect associations between environment and culture which could be misinterpreted as signal of a direct causal link. Evaluating examples of cross-cultural correlations from the literature, we show that significant correlations interpreted as causal relationships can often be explained as a result of similarity between neighbouring cultures. We discuss some strategies for sorting the explanatory wheat from the co-varying chaff, distinguishing incidental correlations from causal relationships.

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Evolutionary Human Sciences

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution licence

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