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How Communication Networks Promote

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

How communication networks promote cross-cultural similarities: The case of category formation

Douglas Guilbeault

Dr

University of California, Berkeley

Schedule
Thursday, June 2, 2022

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Wednesday, June 1, 2022

11:00 PM America/Chicago

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Host: Analogical Minds

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Analogical Minds

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90.00 minutes

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Abstract

Individuals vary widely in how they categorize novel phenomena. This individual variation has led canonical theories in cognitive and social science to suggest that communication in large social networks leads populations to construct divergent category systems. Yet, anthropological data indicates that large, independent societies consistently arrive at similar categories across a range of topics. How is it possible for diverse populations, consisting of individuals with significant variation in how they view the world, to independently construct similar categories? Through a series of online experiments, I show how large communication networks within cultures can promote the formation of similar categories across cultures. For this investigation, I designed an online “Grouping Game” to observe how people construct categories in both small and large populations when tasked with grouping together the same novel and ambiguous images. I replicated this design for English-speaking subjects in the U.S. and Mandarin-speaking subjects in China. In both cultures, solitary individuals and small social groups produced highly divergent category systems. Yet, large social groups separately and consistently arrived at highly similar categories both within and across cultures. These findings are accurately predicted by a simple mathematical model of critical mass dynamics. Altogether, I show how large communication networks can filter lexical diversity among individuals to produce replicable society-level patterns, yielding unexpected implications for cultural evolution. In particular, I discuss how participants in both cultures readily harnessed analogies when categorizing novel stimuli, and I examine the role of communication networks in promoting cross-cultural similarities in analogy-making as the key engine of category formation.

Topics

ambiguous imagesanalogiescategory formationcommunication networkscritical mass dynamicscultural evolutionlexical diversityonline experimentssocial groups

About the Speaker

Douglas Guilbeault

Dr

University of California, Berkeley

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

haas.berkeley.edu/faculty/douglas-guilbeault/

@DzGuilbeault

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twitter.com/DzGuilbeault

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