Foraging complexity and the evolution of childhood

Science Advances Vol/Iss. 8(41) American Association for the Advancement of Science Published In Pages: eabn9889
By Pretelli, Ilaria, Ringen, Erik J. , Lew-Levy, Sheina

Abstract

Why do humans have long childhoods and slow physical growth rates compared to nonhuman primates? The embodied capital theory (ECT) posits that the hard-to-extract, energy-packed resources sought by humans require more complex cognitive and physical skills, which are acquired during a longer development period. The authors of this article test this theory through a comparative analysis of different forms of resource types and skill level by age in 28 different societies. Their findings support ECT, suggesting that long childhoods evolved as a period to develop the skills required for extracting complex resources in foraging societies.

Samples

Sample Used Coded Data Comment
Compiled datasetResearchers' ownObservations from 28 societies collected through a systematic search using major search engines (Google Scholar, JSTOR, PsycNet, ScienceDirect, Springer, and Wiley).

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