Archeological insights into hominin cognitive evolution

被引:43
作者
Wynn, Thomas [1 ]
Coolidge, Frederick L. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Anthropol, Colorado Springs, CO 80907 USA
[2] Univ Oxford Keble Coll, Oxford OX1 3PG, England
[3] UCCS Ctr Cognit Archaeol, Colorado Springs, CO USA
来源
EVOLUTIONARY ANTHROPOLOGY | 2016年 / 25卷 / 04期
关键词
evolutionary cognitive archeology; spatial cognition; long-term working memory; executive functions; MIDDLE STONE-AGE; HUNTER-GATHERER THEORY; EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS; WORKING-MEMORY; MODERN HUMANS; WEST TURKANA; TOOL-MAKING; LANGUAGE; INTELLIGENCE; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1002/evan.21496
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
How did the human mind evolve? How and when did we come to think in the ways we do? The last thirty years have seen an explosion in research related to the brain and cognition. This research has encompassed a range of biological and social sciences, from epigenetics and cognitive neuroscience to social and developmental psychology. Following naturally on this efflorescence has been a heightened interest in the evolution of the brain and cognition. Evolutionary scholars, including paleoanthropologists, have deployed the standard array of evolutionary methods. Ethological and experimental evidence has added significantly to our understanding of nonhuman brains and cognition, especially those of nonhuman primates. Studies of fossil brains through endocasts and sophisticated imaging techniques have revealed evolutionary changes in gross neural anatomy. Psychologists have also gotten into the game through application of reverse engineering to experimentally based descriptions of cognitive functions. For hominin evolution, there is another rich source of evidence of cognition, the archeological record. Using the methods of Paleolithic archeology and the theories and models of cognitive science, evolutionary cognitive archeology documents developments in the hominin mind that would otherwise be inaccessible.
引用
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页码:200 / 213
页数:14
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