Cover not available

Article published In: Interaction Studies
Vol. 18:1 (2017) ► pp.2654

Get fulltext from our e-platform
References (113)
References
Adornetti, I. (2015). Competition and cooperation in language evolution: A comparison between communication of apes and humans. In F. E’Errico, I. Poggi, J. Vinciarelli, & L. Vincze (Eds.), Conflict and multimodal communication: Social research and machine intelligence (pp. 91–101). New York: Springer. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Allen, J. M., Worman, C. O., Light, J. E., & Reed, D. L. (2013). Parasitic lice help to fill in the gaps of early hominid history. In J. F. Brinkworth & K. Pechenkina (Eds.), Primates, pathogens and evolution (pp. 161–186). New York: Springer. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Amaral, L. Q. (2008). Mechanical analysis of infant carrying in hominoids. Naturwissenschaften, 951, 281–292. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Asch, S. E. (1956). Studies of independence and conformity: I. A minority of one against a unanimous majority. Psychological Monographs, 70, no. 9 (Whole No. 416). Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Berger, J., & Heath, C. (2008). Who drives divergence? Identity signaling, outgroup similarity, and the abandonment of cultural tastes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 951, 593–607. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Boesch, C. (2005). Joint cooperative hunting among wild chimpanzees in the Taï National Park. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 281, 692–693. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Bolhuis, J. J., Tattersall, I., Chomsky, N., & Berwick, R. C. (2014). How could language have evolved? PLOS Biology, 12, 8, e1001934. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Boyd, R., Richerson, P. J., & Henrich, J. (2011). The cultural niche: Why social learning is essential for human adaptation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 1081, 10918–10925.
Bråten, S. (2000). Essays on dialogue in infant and adult. Bergen, Norway: Sigma.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2004). Hominin infant decentration hypothesis: Mirror neurons system adapted to subserve mother-centered participation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 271, 508–509. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2007). Participant perception of the speaker by conversation partners and infant learners: On the origins of (m)othercentred participation. Paper presented at the Symposium of the Distributed Language Group, Language dynamics and the phenomenology of individual experience, Grimstad, Norway.
Carvalho, S., Biro, D., Cunha, E., Hockings, K., McGrew, W. C., Richmond, B. G., & Matsuzawa, T. (2010). Chimpanzee carrying behaviour and the origins of human bipedality. Current Biology, 22(6), R180–R181. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Cialdini, R. B., & Goldstein, N. J. (2004) Social influence: Compliance and conformity. Annual Review of Psychology, 551, 591–621. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Cialdini, R., & Trost, M. (1998). Social influence: Social norms, conformity, and compliance. In D. Gilbert, S. Fiske, & G. Lindzey (Eds.), The handbook of social psychology (Vol. 21, 4th edition) (pp. 151–192). New York: McGraw-Hill.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Claidière, N., & Whiten, A. (2012). Integrating the study of conformity and culture in human and nonhuman animals. Psychological Bulletin, 1381, 126–145. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Corriveau, K. H., Fusaro, M., & Harris, P. L. (2009). Going with the flow: Preschoolers prefer nondissenters as informants. Psychological Science, 201, 372–377. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Corriveau, K. H., & Harris, P. L. (2010). Preschoolers (sometimes) defer to the majority in making simple perceptual judgments. Developmental Psychology, 461, 437–445. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Corriveau, K. H., Kinzler, K. D., & Harris, P. L. (2013). Accuracy trumps accent in children’s endorsement of object labels. Developmental Psychology, 491, 470–479. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Clark, H. H. (1996). Using language. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Cowley, S. (2004). Early hominins, utterance-activity, and niche construction. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 271, 509–510. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Crockford, C., Wittig, R. M., Mundry, R., & Zuberbühler, K. (2012). Wild chimpanzees inform ignorant group members of danger. Current Biology, 221, 1–5. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Crockford, C., Wittig, R. M., Langergraber, K., Ziegler, T. E., Zuberbühler, K., & Deschner, T. (2013). Urinary oxytocin and social bonding in related and unrelated wild chimpanzees. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2801, 20122765. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Duguid, S., Wyman, E., Bullinger, A. F., Herfurth-Majstorovic, K., & Tomasello, M. (2014), Coordination strategies of chimpanzees and human children in a Stag Hunt game. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2811, 20141973. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Efferson, C., Lalive, R., Richerson, P. J., McElreath, R., & Lubell, M. (2008). Conformists and mavericks: the empirics of frequency-dependent cultural transmission. Evolution of Human Behavior, 291, 56–64. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Efferson, C., Richerson, P. J., McElreath, R., Lubell, M., Edsten, E., Waring, T. M., Paciotti, B., & Baum, W. (2007). Learning, productivity, and noise: an experimental study of cultural transmission on the Bolivian Altiplano. Evolution and Human Behavior, 281, 11–17. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Enquist, M., Eriksson, K., & Ghirlanda, S. (2007). Critical social learning: A solution to Roger’s paradox of nonadaptive culture. American Anthropologist, 1091, 727–734. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Eriksson, K., & Coultas, J. C. (2009). Are people really conformist-biased? An empirical test and a new mathematical model. Journal of Evolutionary Psychology, 71, 5–21. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Eriksson, K., Enquist, M., & Ghirlanda, S. (2007). Critical points in current theory of conformist social learning. Journal of Evolutionary Psychology, 51, 67–87. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Eriksson, K., & Strimling, P. (2009). Biases for acquiring information individually rather than socially. Journal of Evolutionary Psychology, 71, 309–329. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Falk, D. (2004). Prelinguistic evolution in early hominins: Whence motherese? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 271, 491–541. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2009). Finding our tongues: Mothers, infants, and the origins of language. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Francis, W. N. (1983). Dialectology. London: Longmans.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Fusaroli, R., Bahrami, B., Olsen, K., Roepstorff, A., Rees, G., Frith, C., & Tylén, K. (2012). Coming to terms: quantifying the benefits of linguistic coordination. Psychological Science, 231 931–939. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Haun, D.B. M., Rekers, Y., & Tomasello, M. (2014). Children conform to the behavior of peers; Other great apes stick with what they know. Psychological Science, 251, 2160–2167. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Haun, D.B. M., & Tomasello, M. (2011). Conformity to peer pressure in preschool children. Child Development, 821, 1759–1767. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Healey, P.G. T., Purver, M., & Howes, C. (2014). Divergence in dialogue. PLOS One, 9, 6, e98598. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Heft, H. (1983). Wayfinding as the perception of information over time. Population & Environment, 61, 133–150. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Heyes, C. M. (2011). Automatic imitation. Psychological Bulletin, 1371, 463–483. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hodges, B. H. (2007a). Good prospects: Ecological and social perspectives on conforming, creating, and caring in conversation. Language Sciences, 291, 584–604. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2007b). Values define fields: The intentional dynamics of driving, carrying, leading, negotiating, and conversing. Ecological Psychology, 191, 153–178.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2014). Rethinking conformity and imitation: Divergence, convergence, and social understanding. Frontiers in Psychology: Cognitive Science, 5, 726.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2017). Conformity and divergence in interactions, groups, and culture. In S. Harkins, K. Williams, & J. Burger (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of social influence (pp. 87–105). New York: Oxford University Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hodges, B. H., & Baron, R. M. (1992). Values as constraints on affordances: Perceiving and acting properly. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 221, 263–294. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hodges, B. H., & Geyer, A. (2006). A nonconformist account of the Asch experiments: Values, pragmatics, and moral dilemmas. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 101, 2–19. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hodges, B. H., & Lindhiem, O. (2006). Carrying babies and groceries: The effect of moral and social weight on caring. Ecological Psychology, 181, 93–111. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hodges, B. H., Meagher, B. R., Norton, D. J., McBain, R., & Sroubek, A. (2014). Speaking from ignorance: Not agreeing with others we believe are correct. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1061, 218–234. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hofman, D., Bos, P. A., Schutter, J.L. G., & van Honk, J. (2012). Fairness modulates non-conscious facial mimicry in women. Proceedings of the Royal Society B , 2791, 3535–3539.
Hrdy, S. B. (1999). Mother nature: A history of mothers, infants and natural selection. New York: Pantheon.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2009). Mothers and others: The evolutionary origins of mutual understanding. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hunt, K. D. (1994). The evolution of human bipedality: Ecology and functional morphology. Journal of Human Evolution, 261, 183–202. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Isbell, L. A., & Young, T. P. (1996). The evolution of bipedalism in hominids and reduced group size in chimpanzees: Alternative responses to decreasing resource availability. Journal of Human Evolution, 301, 289–297. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Jetten, J., & Hornsey, M. J. (2014). Deviance and dissent in groups. Annual Review of Psychology, 651, 461–485. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Johansson, S., Zlatev, J., & Gardenfors, P. (2006). Why don’t chimps talk and humans sing like canaries? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 291, 287–288. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Karremans, J. C., & Verwijmeren, T. (2008). Mimicking attractive opposite-sex others: The role of romantic relationship status. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin, 341, 939–950. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Laks, B. (2013). Why is there variation rather than nothing? Language Sciences, 391, 31–53. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Lewis, D. (1969). Convention. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Locke, J. L., & Bogin, B. (2006). Language and life history: A new perspective on the development and evolution of human language. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 291, 259–325. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Lovejoy, C. O. (1981). The origin of man. Science, 2111, 341–350. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2009). Reexamining human origins in light of Ardipithecus ramidus . Science, 3261, 74e1-74e8. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Lovejoy, C. O., Suwa, G., Spurlock, L., Asfaw, B., & White, T. D. (2009). The pelvis and femur of Ardipithecus ramidus: The emergence of upright walking. Science, 3261, 71e1-71e6. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Lumsden, J., Miles, L. K., Richardson, M. J., Smith, C. A., & Macrae, C. N. (2012). Who syncs? Social motives and interpersonal coordination. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 481, 746–751. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Marsh, K. L., Richardson, M. J., & Schmidt, R. C. (2009). Social connection through joint action and interpersonal coordination. Topics in Cognitive Science, 11, 320–339. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
McBride, G. (2014). Storytelling, behavior planning, and language evolution in context. Frontiers in Psychology, 5, 1131. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
McElreath, R., Lubell, M., Richerson, P. J., Waring, T. M., Baum, W., Edsten, E., Efferson, C., & Paciotti, B. (2005). Applying evolutionary models to the laboratory study of social learning. Evolution and Human Behavior, 261, 483–508. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Mercier, H., & Sperber, D. (2011). Why do humans reason? Arguments for an argumentative theory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 341, 57–111. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Mesoudi, A. (2011). An experimental comparison of human social learning strategies: Payoff-biased social learning is adaptive but underused. Evolution and Human Behavior, 321, 334–342. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Millikan, R. G. (2005). Language: A biological model. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Mills, G. J. (2014). Dialogue in joint activity: Complementarity, convergence and conventionalization. New Ideas in Psychology, 321, 158–173. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Moll, H., & Tomasello, M. (2007). Co-operation and human cognition: The Vygotskian intelligence hypothesis. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 3621, 639–648. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2012). Three-year-olds understand appearance and reality - Just not about the same object at the same time. Developmental Psychology, 481, 1124–1132. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Moore, R. (2013). Imitation and conventional communication. Biology & Philosophy, 281, 481–500. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Nielsen, M. (2006). Copying actions and copying outcomes: Social learning through the second year. Developmental Psychology, 421, 555–565. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Nielsen, M., Mushin, I., Tomaselli, K., & Whiten, A. (2014). Where culture takes hold: “Overimitation” and its flexible deployment in Western, Aboriginal, and Bushmen children. Child Development, 851, 2169–2184.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Nielsen, M., & Tomaselli, K. (2010). Overimitation in Kalahari bushman children and the origins of human cultural cognition. Psychological Science, 211, 729–736. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Niemitz, C. (2010). The evolution of upright posture and gait—a review and a new synthesis. Naturwissenschaften, 971, 241–263. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Over, H., & Carpenter, M. (2012). Putting the social into social learning: Explaining both selectivity and fidelity in children’s copying behavior. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1261, 182–192. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Pasquini, E. S., Corriveau, K. H., Koenig, M., & Harris, P. L. (2007). Preschoolers monitor the relative accuracy of informants. Developmental Psychology, 431, 1216–1226. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Pickering, M. J., & Garrod, S. (2004). Toward a mechanistic psychology of dialogue. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 271, 169–190. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Pontzer, H., Raichlen, D. A., & Sockol, M. D. (2009). The metabolic cost of walking in humans, chimpanzees, and early hominins. Journal of Human Evolution, 561, 43–54. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Provine, R. H. (2004). Walkie-talkie evolution: Bipedalism and vocal production. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 271, 520–521. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Raubal, M. (2008). Wayfinding: Affordances and agent simulation. Encyclopedia of GIS (pp. 1243–1246). New York: Springer. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Reddy, V. (2008). How infants know minds. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Redhead, G., & Dunbar, R.I. M. (2013). The functions of language: An experimental study. Evolutionary Psychology, 111, 845–854. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Reed, E. S. (1996). Encountering the world: Toward an ecological psychology. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Rekers, Y., Haun, D.B. M., & Tomasello, M. (2011). Children, but not chimpanzees, prefer to collaborate. Current Biology, 211, 1756–1758. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Richerson, P. J., & Boyd, R. (2005). Not by genes alone: How culture transformed human evolution. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Riley, M. A., & Turvey, M. T. (2002). Variability and determinism in motor behavior. Journal of Motor Behavior, 341, 99–125. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Roche, J. M., Dale, R., & Caucci, G. M. (2012). Double up on double meanings: Pragmatic alignment. Language and Cognitive Processes, 271, 1–24. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Rost, G. C., & McMurray, B. (2010). Finding the signal by adding noise: The role of noncontrastive phonetic variability in early world learning. Infancy, 151, 608–635. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Schel, A. M., Townsend, S. W., Machanda, Z., Zuberbühler, K., & Slocombe, K. E. (2013). Chimpanzee alarm call production meets key criteria for intentionality. PLOS One, 81, e76674. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Shockley, K., Santana, M. V., & Fowler, C. A. (2003). Mutual interpersonal postural constraints are involved in cooperative conversation. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 291, 326–332. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Sockol, M. D., Raichlen, D. A., & Pontzer, H. (2007). Chimpanzee locomotor energetics and the origin of human bipedalism. PNAS, 1041, 12265–12269. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Sterelny, K. (2003). Thought in a hostile world. Malden, MA: Basil Blackwell. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Strigul, N. (2009). Can imitation explain dialect origins? Ecological Modeling, 2201, 2624–2639. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Suddendorf, T. (2013). The gap: The science of what separates us from other animals. New York: Basic Books. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Sutou, S. (2012). Hairless mutation: A driving force of humanization from a human-ape common ancestor by enforcing upright walking while holding a baby with both hands. Genes to Cells, 171, 264–272. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Tilsen, S. (2015). Structured nonstationarity in articulatory timing. In The Scottish Consortium for ICPhS 2015 (Ed.), Proceedings of the 18th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences. Glasgow: University of Glasgow. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Tomasello, M. (1999). The cultural origins of human cognition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2008). Origins of human communication. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2009). Why we cooperate. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2014a). A natural history of human thinking. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2014b). The ultra-social animal. European Journal of Social Psychology, 441, 187–194. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Tomasello, M., & Haberl, K. (2003). Understanding attention: 12- and 18-month olds know what is new for other persons. Developmental Psychology, 391, 906–912. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Tomasello, M., Melis, A. P., Tennie, C., Wyman, E., & Herrmann, E. (2012). Two key steps in the evolution of human cooperation: The interdependence hypothesis. Current Anthropology, 531, 673–692. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Tomasello, M., & Vaish, A. (2013). Origins of human cooperation and morality. Annual Review of Psychology, 641, 231–255. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Waters, D. P. (2012). From extended phenotype to extended affordance: Distributed language at the intersection of Gibson and Dawkins. Language Sciences, 341, 507–512. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Watson, J., Payne, R., Chamberlain, A., Jones, R. K., & Sellers, W. I. (2008). The energetic costs of load-carrying and the evolution of bipedalism. Journal of Human Evolution, 541, 675–683. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (2009). The kinematics of load carrying in humans and great apes: Implications for the evolution of human bipedalism. Folia Primatology, 801, 309–328. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Whalen, D. (2014). Deliberate variability in speech for flexibly engaging other speakers. Poster at conference, Finding Common Ground: Social, Ecological, and Cognitive Perspectives on Language Use , University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT.
Whiten, A., McGuigan, N., Marshall-Pescini, S., & Hopper, L. M. (2009). Emulation, imitation, over-imitation and the scope of culture for child and chimpanzee. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 3641, 2417–2428. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Wittig, R. M., Crockford, C., Deschner, T., Langergraber, K., Ziegler, T. E., & Zuberbühler, K. (2014). Food sharing is linked to urinary oxytocin levels and bonding in related and unrelated wild chimpanzees. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2811, 20133096. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Cited by (6)

Cited by six other publications

Kliesch, Christian
2025. Postnatal dependency as the foundation of social learning in humans. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 292:2045 DOI logo
Hodges, Bert H
2023. Values define agency: Ecological and enactive perspectives reconsidered. Adaptive Behavior 31:6  pp. 559 ff. DOI logo
Hodges, Bert H.
2025. Turvey’s Two Challenges and Ecological Values-Realizing Theory: Reaching, Timing, Learning, and Developing. Ecological Psychology  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Hodges, Bert H.
2025. Searching for rightness: Ecological perspectives on realizing values in acting and perceiving. Theory & Psychology 35:5  pp. 555 ff. DOI logo
Suereth, Russell
2023. Considering caring as a safeguard in artificial intelligence. New Techno Humanities 3:2  pp. 135 ff. DOI logo
Hodges, Bert H. & Joanna Rączaszek-Leonardi
2022. Ecological Values Theory: Beyond Conformity, Goal-Seeking, and Rule-Following in Action and Interaction. Review of General Psychology 26:1  pp. 86 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 17 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue