Cultural evolution of a belief controlling human mate choice: dynamic modeling of the \textit{hinoeuma} superstition in Japan
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2632085
Recommendations
- Cultural evolution of \textit{hinoeuma} superstition controlling human mate choice: the role of half-believer
- Marital preferences and stable matching in cultural evolution
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1900825
- A cultural evolutionary model of the interaction between parental beliefs and behaviors, with applications to vaccine hesitancy
- A two level mutation-selection model of cultural evolution and diversity
- The cultural implications of growth: modeling nonlinear interaction of trait selection and population dynamics
- The evolution of frequency-dependent cultural transmission
- Co-evolution of institutions and preferences: the case of the (human) mating market
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3926702
- Cultural evolution in a population of heterogeneous agents
Cites work
- Cultural transmission in a demographic study of sex ratio at birth in China's future
- Further remarks on Darwinian selection and altruism
- How inconsistency between attitude and behavior persists through cultural transmission
- Pleiotropy and preadaptation in the evolution of human language capacity
- The evolution of continuous variation. II: Complex transmission and assortative mating
Cited in
(1)
This page was built for publication: Cultural evolution of a belief controlling human mate choice: dynamic modeling of the \textit{hinoeuma} superstition in Japan
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q2632085)