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Rudy Garns

The Baldwin Effect, if it ever occurs, works as follows - 0 views

  • The Baldwin effect occurs, if it ever does, when a biological trait becomes innate as a result of first being learned.  Suppose that some trait is initially absent from a population of organisms.  Then a number of organisms succeed in learning the trait.  There will be a Baldwin effect if this period of learning leads to the trait becoming innate throughout the population.
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    "The Baldwin effect occurs, if it ever does, when a biological trait becomes innate as a result of first being learned. Suppose that some trait is initially absent from a population of organisms. Then a number of organisms succeed in learning the trait. There will be a Baldwin effect if this period of learning leads to the trait becoming innate throughout the population." David Papineau
Rudy Garns

The Baldwin Effect and its Significance - 0 views

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    Kim Sterelney. The Baldwin Effect and Its Significance: A Review of Bruce Weber and David Depew (eds) Evolution and Learning: The Baldwin Effect Reconsidered; MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass 2003, pp x, 341.
Rudy Garns

The Evolution of Phenotypic Plasticity Through the Baldwin Effect - 0 views

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    Noesis VI: Article 4
Rudy Garns

Baldwin effect - 0 views

  • Selected offspring would tend to have an increased capacity for learning new skills rather than being confined to genetically coded, relatively fixed abilities. In effect, it places emphasis on the fact that the sustained behavior of a species or group can shape the evolution of that species.
  • a feedback loop operates whereby a dairy culture increases the selective advantage from this genetic trait, while the average population genotype increases the collective rewards of a dairy culture.
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    08.31.2008 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rudy Garns

Multilevel selection in a complex adaptive system: the problem of language origins (pdf) - 0 views

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    Article by Terrence Deacon Draft of chapter to be published in B. Weber & D. Depew (eds.) Evolution and Learning: The Baldwin Effect. Reconsidered. MIT Press, 2003
Rudy Garns

Baldwinian evolution - 0 views

  • we CAN pass on an inherited tendency to ACQUIRE certain traits
  • what is evolving, gradually or quickly (depending on where and what kind of genome we start with) is not the wings or the fins, but the ability to learn certain specific things that give an adaptive advantage, such as swimming or speaking
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    Stevan harnad
Rudy Garns

Talking Heads - 0 views

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    "Our brains are well suited for language. But how did they get that way." Calvin's review of Deacon in the NYRB
Rudy Garns

William H. Calvinreview of T. W. Deacon's THE SYMBOLIC SPECIES (1997) - 0 views

  • This pattern-hunger doesn't require even average intelligence, nor is it limited to speech. Deaf children can do the same four levels of pattern discovery by observing body movements -- but only if they are immersed in a fluent sign-language environment, and equally early in the first few years of life.
  • flexibility during life (learning and creativity) eventually helps to reward genetic variations leading in a similar functional direction. This form-follows-function principle has been known for a century but it's still poorly appreciated.
  • a slow convergence in copying errors toward written recipes with a combination of ingredients, amounts, times, temperatures, and assembly procedures that -- with some common-sense tweaking -- will satisfy "good taste."
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  • The Baldwin effect allows unrecorded tweaking from flexible behavior to secondarily drag along relevant genes ("recipe items") in the long run; it's Darwinian but at one remove. Thus relevant gene combinations "fill in" behind the behavioral advance.
  • "The Baldwinian perspective suggests... that the first stone tools were manufactured by australopithecines, and that the transition to Homo was in part a consequence rather than the cause.... The large brains, stone tools, reduction in dentition, better opposability of thumb and fingers, and more complete bipedality found in post-australopithecine hominids are the physical echoes of a threshold already crossed [in behavior].... Another way to look at this is to say that many of the physical traits that distinguish modern human bodies and brains were ultimately caused by ideas shared down the generations."
  • But selection favoring language need not be via the success of language per se
  • the nonlanguage task of remembering who owes what to whom sets you up for understanding structured sentences. They carry over into linguistic argument structure (those word categories involving actors, recipients, beneficiaries, and so forth), which provide major clues to understanding a story-like sentence about who did what to whom.
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    NYT
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