文献リスト;「人の進化」A Bibliography on Human
Evolution
解説:池田光穂
"Human evolution is the evolutionary process that led to the emergence of anatomically modern humans, beginning with the evolutionary history of primates—in particular genus Homo—and leading to the emergence of Homo sapiens as a distinct species of the hominid family, which includes the great apes. This process involved the gradual development of traits such as human bipedalism and language,[1] as well as interbreeding with other hominins, which indicate that human evolution was not linear but a web.[2][3][4][5] The study of human evolution involves several scientific disciplines, including physical anthropology, primatology, archaeology, paleontology, neurobiology, ethology, linguistics, evolutionary psychology, embryology and genetics.[6] Genetic studies show that primates diverged from other mammals about 85 million years ago, in the Late Cretaceous period(後期白亜紀), and the earliest fossils appear in the Paleocene(暁新世), around 55 million years ago.[7] Within the superfamily Hominoidea, the family Hominidae diverged from the family Hylobatidae(テナガザル科) some 15–20 million years ago; subfamily Homininae (African apes) diverged from Ponginae (orangutans[a]) about 14 million years ago; the tribe Hominini (including humans, Australopithecus, and chimpanzees) parted from the tribe Gorillini (gorillas) between 8–9 million years ago; and, in turn, the subtribes Hominina (humans and extinct biped ancestors) and Panina (chimpanzees) separated 4–7 million years ago.[8]" - Human evolution.
文献
以下は、ダンバー『人類 進化の謎を解き明かす』 参考文献です。
1
『人類
進化の謎を解き明かす』 参考文献
◉第1章 人類とはなにか、いかに誕生したのか
- Balter, V., Braga, J., T.louk, P., and
Thackeray, J. F. Evidence for dietary
change but not landscape use in South African early hominins. Nature
489: 558-60.
- Brunet, M., Guy, F., Pilbeam, D., Mackaye, H. et al. (2002). A new
hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad, Central Africa. Nature 418:
145-51.
- De Miguel, C., and Heneberg, M. (2001). Variation in hominin brain
size:
how much is due to method? Homo 52: 3-58.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1993). Coevolution of neocortex size, group size
and
language in humans. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16: 681-735.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2004). The Human Story. London: Faber and Faber.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2008). Mind the gap: or why humans aren’t just
great
apes. Proceedings of the British Academy 154: 403-23.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shultz, S. (2007). Understanding primate brain
evolution. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London
362B:
649-58.
- Gowlett, J. A. J., Gamble, C., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Human
evolution and the archaeology of the social brain. Current Anthropology
53: 693-722.
- Harrison, T. (2010). Apes among the tangled branches of human
origins.
Science 327: 532-4.
- Haslam, M., Hernandez-Aguílar, A., Ling, V. et al. (2009). Primate
archaeology. Nature 460: 339-444.
- Ingman, M., Kaessmann, H., Pääbo, S., and Gyllensten, U. (2000).
Mitochondrial genome variation and the origin of modern humans.
Nature 408: 708-13.
- Klein, R. (1999). The Human Career, 2nd edition. Chicago: University
of
Chicago Press.
- Krause, J., Fu, Q., Good, J. et al. (2010). The complete
mitochondrial
DNA genome of an unknown hominin from southern Siberia. Nature
464: 894-97.
- Lahr, M. M., and Foley, R. (1994). Multiple dispersals and modern
human
origins. Evolutionary Anthropology 3: 48-60.
- Lockwood, C. A., Kimbel, W. H., and Lynch, J. M. (2004).
Morphometrics
and hominoid phylogeny: support for a chimpanzee–human clade and
differentiation among great ape subspecies. Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences , USA 101: 4356-60.
2 3
- McGrew, W. C. (1992). Chimpanzee Material Culture: Implications for
Human Evolution . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Relethford, J. H. (1995). Genetics and modern human origins.
Evolutionary Anthropology 4: 53-63.
- Reno, P., Meindl, R., McCollum, M., and Lovejoy, O. (2003). Sexual
dimorphism in Australopithecus afarensis was similar to that of modern
humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 100:
9404-9.
- Ruvolo, M. (1997). Molecular phylogeny of the hominoids: inferences
from multiple independent DNA sequence data sets. Molecular Biology
and Evolution 14: 248-65.
- Satta, Y., Klein, J., and Takahata, N. (2000). DNA archives and our
nearest relative: the trichotomy problem revisited. M olec ular
Phylogenetics and Evolution 14: 259-75.
- Senut, B., Pickford, M., Gommery, D., Mein, P., Cheboi, K., and
Coppens,
Y. (2001). First hominid from the Miocene (Lukeino Formation, Kenya).
Comptes Rendus 332: 137-44.
- Shultz, S., Nelson, E., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Hominin
cognitive evolution: identifying patterns and processes in the fossil
and
archaeological record. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society,
London 367B: 2130-40.
- Steudel-Numbers, K. L. (2006). Energetics in Homo erectus and other
early hominins: the consequences of increased lower-limb length.
Journal
of Human Evolution 51: 445-53.
- Stoneking, M. (1993). DNA and recent human evolution. Evolutionary
Anthropology 2: 60-73.
- Swedell, L., and Plummer, T. (2012). Papionin multilevel society as a
model for hominin social evolution. International Journal of
Primatology
33: 1165-93.
- Tooby, J., and DeVore, I. (1987). The reconstruction of hominid
behavioural evolution through strategic modelling. In: W. G. Kinzey
(ed.)
The Evolution of Human Behavior: Primate Models , pp. 183-238. New
York: State University of New York Press.
- Whiten, A., and Byrne, R. W. (eds) (1988). Machiavellian Intelligence
.
Oxford: Oxford University Press. リチャード・バーン、アンドリュー・ホワ
イトゥン『マキャベリ的知性と心の理論の進化論—ヒトはなぜ賢くなったか』
(藤田和生・山下博志・友永雅己訳、ナカニシヤ出版)
- Whiten, A., Horner, V., and Marshall-Pescini, S. (2003). Cultural
panthropology. Evolutionary Anthropology 12: 92-105.
- Wynn, T., and Coolidge, F. L. (2004). The expert Neanderthal mind.
Journal of Human Evolution 46: 467-87.
◉第2章 なにが霊長類の社会の絆を支えたか
- Abbott, D. H., Keverne, E. B., Moore, G. F.,
and Yodyinguad, U. (1986).
Social suppression of reproduction in subordinate talapoin monkeys,
Miopithecus talapoin . In: J. Else and P. C. Lee (eds) Primate
Ontogeny,
pp. 329-41. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Altmann, J. (1980). Baboon Mothers and Infants . Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
- Apperly, I. A. (2012). What is ‘theory of mind’? Concepts, cognitive
processes and individual differences. Quarterly Journal of Experimental
Psychology 65: 825-39.
- Aron, A., Aron, E. N., and Smollan, D. (1992). Inclusion of other in
the self scale and the structure of interpersonal closeness. Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology 63: 596-612.
- Berscheid, E. (1994). Interpersonal relationships. Annual Review of
Psychology 45: 79-129.
- Berscheid, E., Snyder, M., and Omoto, A. M. (1989). The relationship
closeness inventory: assessing the closeness of interpersonal
relationships. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 57:
792-807.
- Bettridge, C., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Perceived risk and
predation in primates: predicting minimum permissible group size. Folia
Primatologica 83: 332-52.
- Bowman, L. A., Dilley, S. R., and Keverne, E. B. (1978). Suppression
of
oestrogen-induced LH surges by social subordination in talapoin
monkeys. Nature 275: 56-8.
- Broad, K. D., Curley, J. P., and Keverne, E. B. (2006). Motherinfant
bonding and the evolution of mammalian social relationships.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London 361B: 2199-214.
- Carrington, S. J., and Bailey, A. J. (2009). Are there Theory of Mind
regions in the brain? A review of the neuroimaging literature. Human
Brain Mapping 30: 2313-35.
- Cartmill, E. A., and Byrne, R. B. (2007). Orangutans modify their
gestural
signaling according to their audience’s comprehension. Current Biology
17: 1-4.
- Cowlishaw, G. (1994). Vulnerability to predation in baboon
populations.
Behaviour 131: 293-304.
- Crockford, C., Wittig, R. M., Mundry, R., and Zuberbühler, K.
(2012).
Wild chimpanzees inform ignorant group members of danger. Current
Biology 22: 142-6.
- Curly, J. P., and Keverne, E. B. (2005). Genes, brains and mammal
social
bonds. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 20: 561-7.
- Depue, R. A., and Morrone-Strupinsky, J. V. (2005). A neurobehavioral
model of affiliative bonding: implications for conceptualizing a human
trait of affiliation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28: 313-95.
4 5
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1980). Determinants and evolutionary consequences
of dominance among female gelada baboons. Behavioral Ecology and
Sociobiology 7: 253-65.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1988). Primate Social Systems . London: Chapman
&
Hall.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1988). Habitat quality, population dynamics and
group
composition in colobus monkeys (Colobus guereza ). International
Journal
of Primatology 9: 299-329.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1989). Reproductive strategies of female gelada
baboons. In: A. Rasa, C. Vogel and E. Voland (eds) Sociobiology of
Sexual
and Reproductive Strategies , pp. 74-92. London: Chapman & Hall.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1991). Functional significance of social grooming
in
primates. Folia Primatologica 57: 121-31.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1995). The mating system of Callitrichid primates.
I. Conditions for the coevolution of pairbonding and twinning. Animal
Behaviour 50: 1057-70.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Brain and behaviour in primate evolution.
In: P.
M. Kappeler and J. Silk (eds) Mind the Gap: Tracing the Origins of
Human Universals , pp. 315-30. Berlin: Springer.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). The social role of touch in humans and
primates:
behavioural function and neurobiological mechanisms. Neuroscience and
Biobehavioral Reviews 34: 260–68.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Dunbar, P. (1988). Maternal time budgets of
gelada
baboons. Animal Behaviour 36: 970-80.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Lehmann, J. (2013) Grooming and cohesion in
primates: a comment on Grueter et al. Evolution and Human Behavior
34: 453-455.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shultz, S. (2010). Bondedness and sociality.
Behaviour 147: 775-803.
- Fedurek, P., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2009). What does mutual grooming
tell
us about why chimpanzees groom? Ethology 115: 566-75.
- Gallagher, H. L., and Frith, C. D. (2003). Functional imaging of
‘theory of
mind’. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7: 77-83.
- Granovetter, M. (1973). The strength of weak ties. American Journal
of
Sociology 78: 1360-80.
- Granovetter, M. (1983). The strength of weak ties: a network theory
revisited. Sociological Theory 1: 201-33.
- Grueter, C. C., Bissonnette, A., Isler, K., and van Schaik, C. P.
(2013).
Grooming and group cohesion in primates: implications for the evolution
of language. Evolution and Human Behavior 34: 61-8.
- Harcourt, A. H. (1992). Coalitions and alliances: are primates more
complex than non-primates? In: A. H. Harcourt and F. B. M. de Waal
(eds.) Coalitions and Alliances in Humans and Other Animals , pp. 445-
72. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Harcourt, A. H., and Greenberg, J. (2001). Do gorilla females join
males
to avoid infanticide? A quantitative model. Animal Behaviour 62:
905-15.
- Hare, B., Call, J., Agnetta, B., and Tomasello, M. (2000).
Chimpanzees
know what conspecifics do and do not see. Animal Behaviour 59: 771-85.
- Hare, B., Call, J., and Tomasello, M. (2001). Do chimpanzees know
what
conspecifics know? Animal Behaviour 61: 139-51.
- Hill, R. A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1998). An evaluation of the roles
of predation rate and predation risk as selective pressures on primate
grouping behaviour. Behaviour 135: 411-30.
- Hill, R. A., and Lee, P. C. (1998). Predation pressure as an
influence on
group size in Cercopithecoid primates: implications for social
structure.
Journal of Zoology 245: 447-56.
- Hill, R. A., Lycett, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2000). Ecological
determinants
of birth intervals in baboons. Behavioral Ecolology 11: 560-64.
- Huelsenbeck, J. P., Ronquist, F., Nielsen, R., and Bollback, J. P.
(2001).
Bayesian inference of phylogeny and its impact on evolutionary biology.
Science 294: 2310-14.
- Isler, K., and van Schaik, C. P. (2006). Metabolic costs of brain
size
evolution. Biology Letters 2: 557-60.
- Karbowski, J. (2007). Global and regional brain metabolic scaling and
its
functional consequences. BMC Biology 5: 18-46.
- Keverne, E. B., Martensz, N., and Tuite, B. (1989). Beta-endorphin
concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid of monkeys are influenced by
grooming relationships. Psychoneuroendocrinology 14: 155-61.
- Kinderman, P., Dunbar, R. I. M., and Bentall, R. P. (1998).
Theory-ofmind
deficits and causal attributions. British Journal of Psychology 89:
191-204.
- Komers, P. E., and Brotherton, P. N. M. (1997). Female space use is
the
best predictor of monogamy in mammals. Proceedings of the Royal
Society, London 264B: 1261-70.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). Group
size,
grooming and social cohesion in primates. Animal Behaviour 74: 1617-29.
- Lewis, P. A., Birch, A., Hall, A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013).
Higher
order intentionality tasks are cognitively more demanding: evidence for
the social brain hypothesis.
- Lewis, P. A., Rezaie, R., Browne, R., Roberts, N., and Dunbar, R. I.
M.
(2011). Ventromedial prefrontal volume predicts understanding of others
and social network size. NeuroImage 57: 1624-9.
- Machin, A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). The brain opioid theory of
social attachment: a review of the evidence. Behaviour 148: 985-1025.
6 7
- O’Connell, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2003). A test for comprehension
of
false belief in chimpanzees. Evolution and Cognition 9: 131-9.
- Opie, C., Atkinson, Q., Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shultz, S. (2013). Male
infanticide leads to social monogamy in primates. Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences , USA 110: 13328-32.
- van Overwalle, F. (2009). Social cognition and the brain: a
meta-analysis.
Human Brain Mapping 30: 829-58.
- Powell, J., Lewis, P. A., Dunbar, R. I. M., García-Fiñana, M., and
Roberts,
N. (2010). Orbital prefrontal cortex volume correlates with social
cognitive competence. Neuropsychologia 48: 3554-62.
- Roberts, S. B. G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). The costs of family
and
friends: an 18-month longitudinal study of relationship maintenance and
decay. Evolution and Human Behavior 32: 186-97.
- Roberts, S. B. G., Arrow, H., Lehmann, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M.
(2014).
Close social relationships: an evolutionary perspective. In: R. I. M.
Dunbar, C. Gamble and J. A. J. Gowlett (eds) Lucy to Language: The
Benchmark Papers , pp. 151-80. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- van Schaik, C. P., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1990). The evolution of
monogamy in large primates: a new hypothesis and some crucial tests.
Behaviour 115: 30-61.
- van Schaik, C. P., and Kappeler, P. M. (2003). The evolution of
social
monogamy in primates. In: Reichard, U. H., and Boesch, C. (eds)
Monogamy: Mating Strategies and Partnerships in Birds, Humans and
Other Mammals , pp. 59-80. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Shultz, S., Opie, C., and Atkinson, Q. D. (2011). Stepwise evolution
of
stable sociality in primates. Nature 479: 219-222.
- Silk, J. B., Alberts, S. C., and Altmann, J. (2003). Social bonds of
female
baboons enhance infant survival. Science 302: 1232-4.
- Silk, J. B., Beehner, J. C., Bergman, T. J., et al. (2009). The
benefits of
social capital: close social bonds among female baboons enhance
offspring survival. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 276B:
3099-
104.
- Stiller, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). Perspective-taking and
memory
capacity predict social network size. Social Networks 29: 93-104.
- Sutcliffe, A., Dunbar, R. I. M., Binder, J., and Arrow, H. (2012).
Relationships and the social brain: integrating psychological and
evolutionary perspectives. British Journal of Psychology 103: 149-68.
- Vrontou, S., Wong, A., Rau, K., Koerber, H., and Anderson, D. (2013).
Genetic identification of C fibres that detect massage-like stroking of
hairy skin in vivo. Nature 493: 669-73.
- Wittig, R. M., Crockford, C., Lehmann, J. et al. (2008). Focused
grooming
networks and stress alleviation in wild female baboons. Hormones and
Behavior 54: 170-77.
◉第3章 社会脳仮説と時間収支モデル
- Barrickman, N. L., Bastian, M. L., Isler, K.,
and van Schaik, C. P. (2007).
Life history costs and benefits of encephalization: a comparative test
using data from long-term studies of primates in the wild. Journal of
Human Evolution 54: 568-90.
- Barton, R. A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1997). Evolution of the social
brain.
In: A. Whiten and R. Byrne (eds) Machiavellian Intelligence II, pp.
240-
63. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Bergman, T. J., Beehner, J. C., Cheney, D. L., and Seyfarth, R. M.
(2003).
Hierarchical classification by rank and kinship in baboons. Science
302:
1234-6.
- Bettridge, C., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Perceived risk and
predation in primates: predicting minimum permissible group size. Folia
Primatologica 83: 332-352.
- Bettridge, C., Lehmann, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Trade-offs
between time, predation risk and life history, and their implications
for
biogeography: a systems modelling approach with a primate case study.
Ecological Modelling 221: 777-90.
- Byrne, R. W., and Corp, N. (2004). Neocortex size predicts deception
rate
in primates. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 271B: 1693-9.
- Curry, O., Roberts, S. B. G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Altruism
in
social networks: evidence for a ‘kinship premium’. British Journal of
Psychology 104: 283-95.
- Deeley, Q., Daly, E., Asuma, R. et al. (2008). Changes in male brain
responses to emotional faces from adolescence to middle age.
NeuroImage 40: 389-97.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1988). Primate Social Systems. London: Chapman
&
Hall.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1992a). Neocortex size as a constraint on group
size in
primates. Journal of Human Evolution 22: 469-93.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1992b). A model of the gelada socio-ecological
system.
Primates 33: 69-83.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1993). Coevolution of neocortex size, group size
and
language in humans. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16: 681–735.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1998). The social brain hypothesis. Evolutionary
Anthropology 6: 178-90.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2008). Mind the gap: or why humans aren’t just
great
apes. Proceedings of the British Academy 154: 403–23.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). Evolutionary basis of the social brain. In:
J.
Decety and J. Cacioppo (eds) Oxford Handbook of Social Neuroscience ,
8 9
pp. 28-38. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). Constraints on the evolution of social
institutions
and their implications for information flow. Journal of Institutional
Economics 7: 345-71.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shi, J. (2013). Time as a constraint on the
distribution of feral goats at high latitudes. Oikos 122: 403-10.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shultz, S. (2007). Understanding primate brain
evolution. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London
362B:
649-58.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shultz, S. (2010). Bondedness and sociality.
Behaviour 147: 775-803.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., Korstjens, A. H., and Lehmann, J. (2009). Time as
an
ecological constraint. Biological Reviews of the Cambridge
Philosophical
Society 84: 413-29.
- Elton, S. (2006). Forty years on and still going strong: the use of
hominincercopithecid
comparisons in palaeoanthropology. Journal of the Royal-
Anthropological Institute 12: 19-38.
- Fay, J. M., Carroll, R., Peterhans, J. C. K., and Harris, D. (1995).
Leopard
attack on and consumption of gorillas in the Central African Republic.
Journal of Human Evolution 29: 93–9.
- Hamilton, M. J., Milne, B. T., Walker, R. S., Burger, O., and Brown,
J.
H. (2007). The complex structure of hunter-gatherer social networks.
Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 274B: 2195-203.
- Hill, R. A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2003). Social network size in
humans.
Human Nature 14: 53-72.
- Hill, R. A9., Bentley, A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2008). Network
scaling
reveals consistent fractal pattern in hierarchical mammalian societies.
Biology Letters 4: 748-51.
- Joffe, T. H. (1997). Social pressures have selected for an extended
juvenile period in primates. Journal of Human Evolution 32: 593-605.
- Joffe, T. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1997). Visual and socio-cognitive
information processing in primate brain evolution. Proceedings of the
Royal Society, London 264B: 1303-7.
- Kanai, R., Bahrami, B., Roylance, R., and Rees, G. (2012). Online
social
network size is reflected in human brain structure. Proceedings of the
Royal Society, London 279: 1327-34.
- Kelley, J. L., Morrell, L. J., Inskip, C., Krause, J., and Croft, D.
P. (2011).
Predation risk shapes social networks in fission-fusion populations.
PLoSOne
6: e24280.
- Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). Time constraints limit
group sizes and distribution in red and black-and-white colobus
monkeys. International Journal of Primatology 28: 551-75.
- Korstjens, A. H., Lehmann, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Resting
time
as an ecological constraint on primate biogeography. Animal Behaviour
79: 361-74.
- Korstjens, A. H., Verhoeckx, I., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2006). Time as
a constraint on group size in spider monkey. Behavioural Ecology and
Sociobiology 60: 683-94.
- Kudo, H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2001). Neocortex size and social
network
size in primates. Animal Behaviour 62: 711-22.
- Layton, R., O’Hara, S., and Bilsborough, A. (2012). Antiquity and
social
functions of multilevel social organization among human
huntergatherers.
International Journal of Primatology 33: 1215-45.
- Lehmann, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2009). Network cohesion, group
size
and neocortex size in female-bonded Old World primates. Proceedings of
the Royal Society, London 276B: 4417-22.
- Lehmann, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2009). Implications of body mass
and
predation for ape social system and biogeographical distribution. Oikos
118: 379-90.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). Group
size,
grooming and social cohesion in primates. Animal Behaviour 74: 1617-29.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). Fission–
fusion social systems as a strategy for coping with ecological
constraints:
a primate case. Evolutionary Ecology 21: 613-34.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2008a). Time
management in great apes: implications for gorilla biogeography.
Evolutionary Ecology Research 10: 517-36.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2008b). Time and
distribution: a model of ape biogeography. Ecology, Evolution and
Ethology 20: 337-59.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Apes in
a changing world –the effects of global warming on the behaviour and
distribution of African apes. Journal of Biogeography 37: 2217-31.
- Lehmann, J., Lee, P. C., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2014). Unravelling the
evolutionary function of communities. In: R. I. M. Dunbar, C. S. Gamble
and J. A. J. Gowlett (eds) Lucy to Language: The Benchmark Papers , pp.
245-76. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Lewis, P. A., Rezaie, R., Browne, R., Roberts, N., and Dunbar, R. I.
M.
(2011). Ventromedial prefrontal volume predicts understanding of others
and social network size. NeuroImage 57: 1624-9.
- Marlowe, F. G. (2005). Hunter-gatherers and human evolution.
Evolutionary Anthropology 14: 54-67.
- Mink, J. W., Blumenschine, R. J., and Adams, D. B. (1981). Ratio of
central nervous system to body metabolism in vertebrates – its
constancy
10 11
and functional basis. American Journal of Physiology 241: R203-12.
- O’Donnell, S., Clifford, M., and Molina, Y. (2011). Comparative
analysis
of constraints and caste differences in brain investment among social
paper wasps. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 108:
7107-12.
- Palombit, R. A. (1999). Infanticide and the evolution of pairbonds in
nonhuman primates. Evolutionary Anthropology 7: 117-29.
- Passingham, R. E., and Wise, S. P. (2012). The Neurobiology of the
Prefrontal Cortex . Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Pawłowski, B. P., Lowen, C. B., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1998).
Neocortex
size, social skills and mating success in primates. Behaviour 135:
357-68.
- Pérez-Barbería, J., Shultz, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). Evidence
for
intense coevolution of sociality and brain size in three orders of
mammals. Evolution 61: 2811-21.
- Powell, J., Lewis, P. A., Roberts, N.,García-Fiñana, M., and Dunbar,
R. I.
M. (2012). Orbital prefrontal cortex volume predicts social network
size:
an imaging study of individual differences in humans. Proceedings of
the
Royal Society, London 279B: 2157-62.
- de Ruiter, J., Weston, G., and Lyon, S. M. (2011). Dunbar’s number:
group size and brain physiology in humans reexamined. American
Anthropologist 113: 557-68
- Roberts, S. B. G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). The costs of family
and
friends: an 18-month longitudinal study of relationship maintenance and
decay. Evolution and Human Behavior 32: 186-97.
- Roberts, S. B. G., Dunbar, R. I. M., Pollet, T., and Kuppens, T.
(2009). Exploring variations in active network size: constraints and
ego
characteristics. Social Networks 31: 138-46.
- Sallet, J., Mars, R. B., Noonan, M. P., et al. (2011). Social network
size
affects neural circuits in macaques. Science 334: 697-700.
- Saramäki, J., Leicht, E., López, E., Roberts, S., Reed-Tsochas, F.,
and
Dunbar, R. I. M. (2014): The persistence of social signatures in human
communication. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA .
- Sayers, K., and Lovejoy, C. O. (2008). The chimpanzee has no clothes:
a critical examination of Pan troglodytes in models of human evolution.
Current Anthropology 49: 87-114.
- van Schaik, C. P. (1983). Why are diurnal primates living in groups?
Behaviour 87: 91-117.
- Shultz, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2006). Chimpanzee and felid diet
composition is influenced by prey brain size. Biology Letters 2: 505-8.
- Shultz, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). The evolution of the social
brain:
Anthropoid primates contrast with other vertebrates. Proceedings of the
Royal Society, London 274B: 2429-36.
- Shultz, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Encephalisation is not a
universal
macroevolutionary phenomenon in mammals but is associated with
sociality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 107:
21582-6.
- Shultz, S., and Finlayson, L. V. (2010). Large body and small brain
and
group sizes are associated with predator preferences for mammalian
prey. Behavioral Ecology 21: 1073-9.
- Shultz, S., Noe, R., McGraw, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2004). A
communitylevel evaluation of the impact of prey behavioural and
ecological characteristics on predator diet composition. Proceedings of
the Royal Society, London 271B: 725-32.
- Smith, A. R., Seid, M. A., Jimenez, L., and Wcislo, W. T. (2010).
Socially
induced brain development in a facultatively eusocial sweat bee
egalopta
genalis (Halictidae). Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 277B:
2157-63.
- Smuts, B. B., and Nicholson, N. (1989). Dominance rank and
reproduction in female baboons. American Journal of Primatology 19:
229-46.
- Tsukahara, T. (1993). Lions eat chimpanzees: the first evidence of
predation by lions on wild chimpanzees. American Journal of Primatology
29: 1-11.
- Wellman, B. (2012). Is Dunbar’s number up? British Journal of
Psychology. 103: 174-6.
- Willems, E., and Hill, R. A. (2009). A critical assessment of two
species
distribution models taking vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops ) as
a
case study. Journal of Biogeography 36: 2300-312.
- Zhou, W.-X., Sornette, D., Hill, R. A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2005).
Discrete hierarchical organization of social group sizes. Proceedings
of
the Royal Society, London 272B: 439-44.
◉第4章 第一移行期:アウストラロピテクス
- Barrett, L., Gaynor, D., Rendall, D.,
Mitchell, D., and Henzi, S. P. (2004).
Habitual cave use and thermoregulation in chacma baboons (Papio
hamadryas ursinus ). Journal of Human Evolution 46: 215-22.
- Boesch-Achermann, H., and Boesch, C. (1993). Tool use in wild
chimpanzees: new light from dark forests. Current Directions in
Psychological Science 2: 18-22.
- Boesch, C., and Boesch, H. (1983). Optimization of nut-cracking with
natural hammers by wild chimpanzess. Behaviour 83: 265-86.
- Berger, L. (2007). Further evidence for eagle predation of, and
feeding
damage on, the Taung child. South African Journal of Science 103: 496-
8.
12 13
- Bettridge, C. M. (2010). Reconstructing Australopithecine
Socioecology
Using Strategic Modelling Based on Modern Primates . DPhil thesis,
University of Oxford.
- Brain, C. K. (1970). New finds at the Swartkrans australopithecine
site.
Nature 225: 1112-19.
- Carvalho, S., Biro, D., Cunha, E. et al. (2012). Chimpanzee carrying
behavior and the origins of human bipedality. Current Biology 22: R180-
81.
- Cerling, T., Mbua, E., Kirera, F. et al. (2011). Diet of Paranthropus
boisei in the early Pleistocene of East Africa. Proceedings of the
National
Academy of Sciences, USA 108: 9337-41.
- Copeland, S., Sponheimer, M., de Ruiter, J. et al. (2011). Strontium
isotope evidence for landscape use by early hominins. Nature 474: 76-9.
- Dezecache, G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Sharing the joke: the
size of
natural laughter groups. Evolution and Human Behavior 33: 775-9.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Deacon’s dilemma: the problem of pairbonding
in human evolution. In: R. I. M. Dunbar, C. Gamble and J. A. G.
Gowlett (eds) Social Brain, Distributed Mind , pp. 159-79. Oxford:
Oxford
University Press.
- Foley, R. A., and Elton, S. (1995). Time and energy: the ecological
context for the evolution of bipedalism. In: E. Strasser, J. Fleagle,
A. Rosenberger and H. McHenry (eds) Primate Locomotion: Recent
Advances , pp. 419-33. New York: Plenum Press.
- Hunt, K. D. (1994). The evolution of human bipedality: ecology and
functional morphology. Journal of Human Evolution 26: 183-202.
- Klein, R. G. (2000). The Human Career: Human Biological and Cultural
Origins , 3rd edition. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
- Lawrence, K. T., Sosdian, S., White, H. E., and Rosenthal, Y. (2010).
North Atlantic climate evolution through the Plio-Pleistocene climate
transitions. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 300: 329-42.
- Lehmann, J., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2009). Implications of body mass
and
predation for ape social system and biogeographical distribution. Oikos
118: 379-90.
- Lovejoy, C. O. (1981). The origin of man. Science 211: 341-50.
- Lovejoy, C. O. (2009). Reexamining human origins in light of
Ardipithecus
ramidus . Science 326: 74e1-8.
- McGraw, W. S., Cooke, C., and Shultz, S. (2006). Primate remains from
African crowned eagle (Stephanoaetus coronatus ) nests in Ivory Coast’
s Tai Forest: Implications for primate predation and early hominid
taphonomy in South Africa. American Journal of Physical Anthropology
131: 151-65.
- McPherron, S., Alemseged, Z., Marean, C. et al. (2010). Evidence for
stone tool-assisted consumption of animal tissues before 3.39 million
years ago at Dikika, Ethiopia. Nature 466: 857-60.
- Marlowe, F., and Berbesque, J. (2009). Tubers as fallback foods and
their impact on Hadza hunter-gatherers. American Journal of Physical
Anthropology 140: 751-58.
- Nelson, E., and Shultz, S. (2010). Finger length ratios (2D:4D) in
anthropoids implicate reduced prenatal androgens in social bonding.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology 141: 395-405.
- Nelson, E., Rolian, C., Cashmore, L., and Shultz, S. (2011). Digit
ratios
predict polygyny in early apes, Ardipithecus , Neanderthals and early
modern humans but not in Australopithecus. Proceedings of the Royal
Society, London 278B: 1556-63.
- Pawłowski,, B. P., Lowen, C. B., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1998).
Neocortex
size, social skills and mating success in primates. Behaviour 135:
357-68.
- Platt, J. R. (1964). Strong inference. Science 146: 347-53.
- Pontzer, H., Raichlen, D. A., Sockol, M. D. (2009). The metabolic
costs
of walking in humans, chimpanzees and early hominins. Journal of
Human Evolution 56: 43-54.
- Reno, P. L., McCollum, M. A., Meindl, R. S., and Lovejoy, C. O.
(2010).
An enlarged postcranial sample confirms Australopithecus afarensis
dimorphism was similar to modern humans. Philosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society 365B: 3355-63.
- Reno, P. L., Meindl, R. S., McCollum, M. A., and Lovejoy, C. O.
(2003).
Sexual dimorphism in Australopithecus afarensis was similar to that of
modern humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA
100: 9404-9.
- Richmond, B. G., Aiello, L. C., and Wood, B. (2002). Early hominin
limb
proportions. Journal of Human Evolution 43: 529-48.
- Richmond, B. G., Strait, D. S., and Begun, D. R. (2001). Origin of
human
bipedalism: the knuckle-walking hypothesis revisited. Yearbook of
Physical Anthropology 44: 70-105.
- Ruxton, G. D., and Wilkinson, D. M. (2011). Thermoregulation and
endurance running in extinct hominins: Wheeler’s models revisited.
Journal of Human Evolution 61: 169-75.
- Ruxton, G. D., and Wilkinson, D. M. (2011). Avoidance of overheating
and selection for both hair loss and bipedality in hominins.
Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 108: 20965-9.
- Schmid, P., Churchill, S. E., Nalla, S. et al. (2013). Mosaic
morphology in
the thorax of Australopithecus sediba . Science 340.
- Sockol, M. D., Raichlen, D. A., and Pontzer, H. (2007). Chimpanzee
locomotor energetics and the origin of human bipedalism. Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences, USA 104: 12265-9.
14 15
- Sponheimer, M., and Lee-Thorpe, J. (2003). Differential resource
utilization by extant great apes and australopithecines: towards
solving
the C4 conundrum. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 136A: 27-
34.
- Sponheimer, M., Lee-Thorpe, J., de Ruiter, D. et al. (2005).
Hominins,
sedges, and termites: new carbon isotope data from the Sterkfontein
valley and Kruger National Park. Journal of Human Evolution 48: 301-12.
- Tsukahara, T. (1993). Lions eat chimpanzees: the first evidence of
predation by lions on wild chimpanzees. American Journal of Primatology
29: 1-11.
- Ungar, P. S., and Sponheimer, M. (2011). The diets of early hominins.
Science 334: 190-93.
- Ungar, P. S., Grine, F. E., and Teaford, M. F. (2006). Diet in early
Homo :
a review of the evidence and a new model of adaptive versatility.
Annual
Review of Anthropology 35: 209-28.
- Wheeler, P. E. (1984). The evolution of bipedality and loss of
functional
body hair in hominids. Journal of Human Evolution 13: 91-8.
- Wheeler, P. E. (1985). The loss of functional body hair in man: the
influence of thermal environment, body form and bipedality. Journal of
Human Evolution 14: 23-8.
- Wheeler, P. E. (1991). The thermoregulatory advantages of hominid
bipedalism in open equatorial environments: the contribution of
increased convective heat loss and cutaneous evaporative cooling.
Journal of Human Evolution 21: 107-15.
- Wheeler, P. E. (1991). The influence of bipedalism on the energy and
water budgets of early hominids. Journal of Human Evolution 21: 117-36.
- Wheeler, P. E. (1992). The thermoregulatory advantages of large body
size for hominids foraging in savannah environments. Journal of Human
Evolution 23: 351-62.
- Wheeler, P. E. (1992). The influence of the loss of functional hair
on the
water budgets of early hominids. Journal of Human Evolution 23: 379-88.
- Wheeler, P. E. (1993). The influence of stature and body form on
hominid
energy and water budgets: a comparison of Australopithecus and early
Homo physiques. Journal of Human Evolution 24: 13-28.
◉第5章 第二移行期:初期ホモ属
- Aiello, L. C., and Wells, J. (2002).
Energetics and the evolution of the
genus Homo . Annual Review of Anthropology 31: 323-38.
- Aiello, L. C., and Wheeler, P. (1995). The expensive tissue
hypothesis: the
brain and the digestive system in human evolution. Current Anthropology
36: 199-221.
- Allen, K. L., and Kay, R. F. (2012). Dietary quality and
encephalization in
platyrrhine primates. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 279B:
715-21.
- Alperson-Afil, N. (2008). Continual fire-making by hominins at Gesher
Benot Ya‘aqov, Israel. Quaternary Science Reviews 27: 1733-9.
- Bailey, D., and Geary, D. (2009). Hominid Brain Evolution. Human
Nature 20: 67-79.
- Barbetti, M., Clark, J. D., Williams, F. M., and Williams, M. A. J.
(1980).
Palaeomagnetism and the search for very ancient fireplaces in Africa.
Results from a million-year-old Acheulian site in Ethiopia.
Anthropologie
18: 299-304.
- Behrensmeyer, A. K., Todd, N. E., Potts, R., and McBrinn, G. E.
(1997).
Late Pliocene faunal turnover in the Turkana Basin, Kenya and Ethiopia.
Science 278: 1589-94.
- Bellomo, R. V. (1994). Methods of determining early hominid
behavioural
activities associated with the controlled use of fire at FxJj20 Main,
Koobi
Fora, Kenya. Journal of Human Evolution 27: 173-95.
- Berna, F., Goldberg, P., Horwitz, L. K. et al. (2012).
Microstratigraphic
evidence of in situ fire in the Acheulean strata of Wonderwerk Cave,
Northern Cape Province, South Africa. Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, USA 109: E1215-20.
- Binford, L. R., and Ho, C. K. (1985). Taphonomy at a distance:
Zhoukoudian, ‘the cave home of Beijing man’? Current Anthropology 26:
413-42.
- Brain, C. K., and Sillen, A. (1988). Evidence from the Swartkrans
cave for
the earliest use of fire. Nature 336: 464-6.
- Brown, K. S., Marean, C. W., Herries, A. I. R. et al. (2009). Fire as
an
engineering tool of early modern humans. Science 325: 859-62.
- Carmody, R. N., and Wrangham, R. W. (2009). The energetic
significance
of cooking. Journal of Human Evolution 57: 379-91.
- Clark, J. D., and Harris, J. W. K. (1985). Fire and its roles in
early
hominid lifeways. African Archaeological Review 3: 3-27.
- Coqueugniot, H., Hublin, J.-J., Veillon, F., Hou.t, F., and Jacob, T.
(2004).
Early brain growth in Homo erectus and implications for cognitive
ability. Nature 431: 299-302.
- Cordain, L., Miller, J. B., Eaton, S. B., Mann, N., Holt, S. H. A.,
and
Speth, J. D. (2000). Plant-animal subsistence ratios and macronutrient
energy estimations in worldwide hunter-gatherer diets. American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition 71: 682-92.
- Davila Ross, M., Allcock, B., Thomas, C., and Bard, K. A. (2011).
Aping
expressions? Chimpanzees produce distinct laugh types when responding
to laughter of others. Emotion 11: 1013-20.
- Davila Ross, M., Owren, M. J., and Zimmermann, E. (2009).
16 17
Reconstructing the evolution of laughter in great apes and humans.
Current Biology, 19, 1-6.
- deMenocal, P. B. (2004). African climate change and faunal evolution
duringthe Pliocene/Pleistocene. Earth and Planetary Science Letters
220:
3-24.
- De Miguel, C., and Heneberg, M. (2001). Variation in hominin brain
size:
how much is due to method? Homo 52: 3-58.
- Dezecache, G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Sharing the joke: the
size of
natural laughter groups. Evolution and Human Behavior 33: 775-9.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2000). Male mating strategies: a modelling
approach.
In: P. Kappeler (ed.) Primate Males , pp. 259-68. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Bridging the bonding gap: the transition
from
primates to humans. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society,
London 367B: 1837-46.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Gowlett, J. A. J. (2013). Fireside chat: the
impact
of fire on hominin socioecology. In: R. I. M. Dunbar, C. Gamble and J.
A. J. Gowlett (eds) The Lucy Project: The Benchmark Papers , pp.
277-96.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shultz, S. (2007). Understanding primate brain
evolution. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London
362B:
649-58.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., Baron, R., Frangou, A. et al. (2012). Social
laughter
is correlated with an elevated pain threshold. Proceedings of the Royal
Society, London 279B: 1161-7.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., Marriot, A., and Duncan, N. (1997). Human
conversational behaviour. Human Nature 8: 231-46.
- Gonzalez-Voyer, A., Winberg, S., and Kolm, N. (2009). Social fishes
and
single mothers: brain evolution in African cichlids. Proceedings of the
Royal Society, London 276B: 161-7.
- Goren-Inbar N., Alperson N., Kislev, M. E. et al. (2004). Evidence of
hominin control of fire at Gesher Benot Ya‘aqov, Israel. Science 304:
725-
7.
- Goudsbloom, J. (1995). Fire and Civilisation . Harmondsworth:
Penguin.
- Gowlett, J. A. J. (2006). The early settlement of northern Europe:
fire
history in the context of climate change and the social brain. Comptes
Rendus Palevol 5: 299-310
- Gowlett, J. A. J. (2010). Firing up the social brain. In: R. I. M.
Dunbar, C.
Gamble and J. A. J. Gowlett (eds) Social Brain and Distributed Mind ,
pp.
345-70. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Gowlett, J. A. J., and Wrangham, R. W. (2013). Earliest fire in
Africa:
towards convergence of archaeological evidence and the cooking
hypothesis. Azania 48: 5-30.
- Gowlett, J. A. J., Hallos, J., Hounsell, S., Brant, V., and Debenham,
N.
C. (2005). Beeches Pit – archaeology, assemblage dynamics and early
fire history of a Middle Pleistocene site in East Anglia, UK. Eurasian
Prehistory 3: 3-38.
- Gowlett, J. A. J., Harris, J. W. K., Walton, D., and Wood, B. A.
(1981).
Early archaeological sites, hominid remains and traces of fire from
Chesowanja, Kenya. Nature 294: 125-9.
- Hallos J. (2005). ‘15 Minutes of Fame’: exploring the temporal
dimension
of Middle Pleistocene lithic technology. Journal of Human Evolution 49:
155-79.
- Hartwig, W., Rosenberger, A., Norconk, M., and Owl, M. (2011).
Relative
brain size, gut size, and evolution in New World Monkeys. Anatomical
Record 294: 2207-21.
- Isler, K., and van Schaik, C. P. (2009). The expensive brain: a
framework
for explaining evolutionary changes in brain size. Journal of Human
Evolution 57: 392-400.
- Isler, K., and van Schaik, C. P. (2012). How our ancestors broke
through
the gray ceiling. Current Anthropology 53: S453-65.
- Klein, R. G. (2000). The Human Career: Human Biological and Cultural
Origins , 3rd edition. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
- Kotrschal, A., Rogell, B., Bundsen, A. et al. (2013). Artificial
selection
on relative brain size in the guppy reveals costs and benefits of
evolving
a larger brain. Current Biology 23: 1-4.
- Larson, S. G. (2007). Evolutionary transformation of the hominin
shoulder. Evolutionary Anthropology 16: 172-87.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007). Group
size,
grooming and social cohesion in primates. Animal Behaviour 74: 1617-29.
- Leonard, W. R., Robertson, M. L., Snodgrass, J. J., and Kuzawa, C. W.
(2003). Metabolic correlates of hominid brain evolution. Comparative
Biochemistry and Physiology 136A: 5-15.
- Ludwig, B. (2000). New evidence for the possible use of controlled
fire
from ESA sites in the Olduvai and Turkana basins. Journal of Human
Evolution 38: A17.
- de Lumley, H. (2006). Il y a 400,000 ans: la domestication du feu, un
formidable moteur d’hominisation. In: H. de Lumley (ed.) Climats,
Cultures et Sociétés aux Temps Préhistoriques, de l’Apparition des
Hominidés Jusqu’au Néolithique. Comptes Rendus Palevol 5: 149-54.
- McKinney, C. (2001). The uranium-series age of wood from Kalambo
Falls. Appendix D in: J. D. Clark (ed.) 2001. Kalambo Falls , Vol. 3,
pp.
665-74. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Maslin, M. A., and Trauth, M. H. (2009). Plio-Pleistocene East
African
18 19
pulsed climate variability and its influence on early human evolution.
In: F. E. Grine, J. G. Fleagle and R. E. Leakey (eds.) The First
Humans:
Origin and Early Evolution of the Genus Homo , pp. 151–8. Berlin:
Springer.
- Morwood, M., Soejono, R., Roberts, R. et al. Archaeology and age of
a new hominin from Flores in eastern Indonesia. Nature 431: 1087-91.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v431/n7012/abs/nature02956.
html – a8(2004).
- Navarette, A., van Schailk, C. P., and Isler, K. (2011). Energetics
and the
evolution of human brain size. Nature 480: 91-3.
- Niven, J. E., and Laughlin, S. B. (2008). Energy limitation as a
selective
pressure on the evolution of sensory systems. Journal of Experimental
Biology 211: 1792-804.
- Osaka City University (2011). Catalogue of Fossil Hominids Database.
http://gbs.ur-plaza.osaka-cu.ac.jp/kaseki/index.html
- Pawtowski, B. P., Lowen, C. B., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1998).
Neocortex
size, social skills and mating success in primates. Behaviour 135:
357-68.
- Plavcan, J. M. (2012). Body size, size variation, and sexual size
dimorphism in early Homo . Current Anthropology 53: S409-23.
- Preece, R. C., Gowlett, J. A. J., Parfitt, S. A., Bridgland, D. R.,
and Lewis, S.
G. (2006). Humans in the Hoxnian: habitat, context and fire use at
Beeches Pit, West Stow, Suffolk, UK. Journal of Quaternary Science 21:
485-96.
- Provine, R. (2000). Laughter. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
- Richmond, B. G., Aiello, L. C., and Wood, B. (2002). Early hominin
limb
proportions. Journal of Human Evolution 43: 529-48.
- Roach, N. T., Venkadesan, M., Rainbow, M. J., and Lieberman, D. E.
(2013). Elastic energy storage in the shoulder and the evolution of
highspeed
throwing in Homo . Nature 498: 483-7.
- Roebroeks, W., and Villa, P. (2011). On the earliest evidence for
habitual
use of fire in Europe. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
USA 108: 5209-14.
- Rolland, N. (2004). Was the emergence of home bases and domestic fire
a punctuated event? A review of the Middle Pleistocene record in
Eurasia. Asian Perspectives 43: 248-80.
- Shipman, P., and Walker, A. (1989). The costs of becoming a predator.
Journal of Human Evolution 18: 373-92.
- Shultz, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Social bonds in birds are
associated with brain size and contingent on the correlated evolution
of
life-history and increased parental investment. Biological Journal of
the
Linnean Society 100: 111-23.
- Shultz, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Encephalisation is not a
universal
macroevolutionary phenomenon in mammals but is associated with
sociality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 107:
21582-6.
- Shultz, A., and Maslin, M. (2013). Early human speciation, brain
expansion and dispersal influenced by African climate pulses. PLoS One
8: e76750.
- Simpson, S. W., Quade, J., Levin, N. E. et al. (2008). A female Homo
erectus pelvis from Gona, Ethiopia. Science 322: 1089-92.
- Speth, J. D. (1991). Protein selection and avoidance strategies of
contemporary and ancestral foragers: unresolved issues. Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society, London 334: 265-70.
- Ungar, P. S. (2012). Dental evidence for the reconstruction of diet
in
African early Homo . Current Anthropology 53: S318-29.
- Weiner S., Xu Q., Goldberg P., Lui J., and Bar-Yosef, O. (1998).
Evidence
for the use of fire at Zhoukoudian, China. Science 281: 251-3.
- Williams, D. F., Peck, J., Karabanov, E. B. et al. (1997). Lake
Baikal
record of continental climate response to orbital insolation during the
past 5 million years. Science 278: 1114-17.
- Wood, B., and Collard, M. (1999). The human genus. Science 284:
65-71.
- Wrangham, R. W. (2010). Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human .
New York: Basic Books. リチャード・ランガム『火の賜物—ヒトは料理で
進化した』(依田卓己訳、エヌティティ出版)
- Wrangham, R. W., and Conklin-Brittain, N. (2003). Cooking as a
biological trait. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A, 136:
35-46.
- Wrangham, R. W., and Peterson, D. (1996). Demonic Males: Apes and the
Origins of Human Violence . New York: Houghton Mifflin. リチャード・ラ
ンガム、デイル・ピーターソン『男の凶暴性はどこからきたか』(山下篤子訳、
三田出版会)
- Wrangham, R. W., Jones, J. H., Laden, G., Pilbeam, D., and Conklin-
Brittain, N. (1999). The raw and the stolen: cooking and the ecology of
human origins. Current Anthropology 40: 567-94.
- Wrangham, R. W., Wilson, M. L., and Muller, M. N. (2006). Comparative
rates of violence in chimpanzees and humans. Primates 47: 14-26.
- Wu, X., Schepartz, L. A., Falk, D., and Liu, W. (2006). Endocranial
cast
of Hexian Homo erectus from South China. American Journal of Physical
Anthropology 130: 445-54.
◉第6章 第三移行期:
旧人
- Bailey, D., and Geary, D. (2009). Hominid brain evolution. Human
Nature
20: 67-79.
- Beals, K. L., Courtland, L. S., Dodd, S. M. et al.(1984). Brain size,
cranial
morphology, climate, and time machines. Current Anthropology 25: 301-
20 21
30.
- Bergman (2013). Speech-like vocalized lip-smacking in geladas.
Current
Biology 23: R268–9.
- Arsuaga, J. L., Bermúdez de Castro, J. M., and Carbonell, E. (eds.)
(1997).
The Sima de los Huesos hominid site. Journal of Human Evolution 33:
105-421.
- Balzeau, A., Holloway, R. L., and Grimaud-Hervé,, D. (2012).
Variations
and asymmetries in regional brain surface in the genus Homo . Journal
of
Human Evolution 62: 696-706.
- Bruner, E., Manzi, G., and Arsuaga, J. L. (2003 ). Encephalization
and
allometric trajectories in the genus Homo : evidence from the
Neandertal
and modern lineages. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
USA 100: 15335-40.
- Carbonell, E., and Mosquera, A. (2006). The emergence of a symbolic
behaviour: the sepulchral pit of Sima de los Huesos, Sierra de
Atapuerca,
Burgos, Spain. Comptes Rendus Palevol 5: 155-60.
- Churchill, S. E. (1998). Cold adaptation, heterochrony, and
Neandertals.
Evolutionary Anthropology 7: 46-61.
- Cohen, E., Ejsmond-Frey, R., Knight, N., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010).
Rowers’ high: behavioural synchrony is correlated with elevated pain
thresholds. Biology Letters 6: 106-8.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). On the evolutionary function of song and
dance.
In: N. Bannan (ed.) Music, Language and Human Evolution , pp. 201–14.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shi, J. (2013). Time as a constraint on the
distribution of feral goats at high latitudes. Oikos 122: 403-10.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., Kaskatis, K., MacDonald, I., and Barra, V. (2012).
Performance of music elevates pain threshold and positive affect.
Evolutionary Psychology 10: 688-702.
- Foley, R. A., and Lee, P. C. (1989). Finite social space,
evolutionary
pathways, and reconstructing hominid behavior. Science 243: 901-6.
- Gunz, P., Neubauer, S., Golovanova, L. et al. (2012). A uniquely
modern
human pattern of endocranial development. Insights from a new cranial
reconstruction of the Neandertal newborn from Mezmaiskaya. Journal of
Human Evolution 62: 300-13.
- Gustison, M. L., le Roux, A., and Bergman, T. J. (2012). Derived
vocalizations of geladas (Theropithecus gelada ) and the evolution of
vocal complexity in primates. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal
Society, London B 367B: 1847-59.
- Holmes, J. A., Atkinson, T., Darbyshire, D. P. F. et al. (2010).
Middle
Pleistocene climate and hydrological environment at the Boxgrove
hominin site (West Sussex, UK) from ostracod records. Quaternary
Science Reviews 29: 1515-27.
- Joffe, T., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1997). Visual and socio-cognitive
information processing in primate brain evolution. Proceedings of the
Royal Society, London 264B: 1303-7.
- Kirk, E. C. (2006). Effects of activity pattern on eye size and
orbital
aperture size in primates. Journal of Human Evolution 51: 159-70.
- Klein, R. G. (2000). The Human Career: Human Biological and Cultural
Origins , 3rd edition. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
- Krings, M., Stone, A., Schmitz, R. W., Krainitzki, H., Stoneking, M.,
and
Pääbo, S. (1997). Neandertal DNA sequences and the origin of modern
humans. Cell 90: 19-30.
- Lalueza-Fox, C., Rosas, A., Estalrrich, A. et al. (2010). Genetic
evidence
for patrilocal mating behaviour among Neandertal groups. Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences, USA 108: 250-53.
- McNeill, W. H. (1995). Keeping in Time Together: Dance and Drill in
Human History. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Maslin, M. A., and Trauth, M. H. (2009). Plio-Pleistocene East
African
pulsed climate variability and its influence on early human evolution.
In:
F. E. Grine, J. G. Fleagle and R. E. Leakey (eds) The First Humans:
Origin
and Early Evolution of the Genus Homo , pp. 151-8. Berlin: Springer.
- Mithen, S. (2005). The Singing Neanderthals: The Origins of Music,
Language, Mind and Body. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ス
ティーヴン・ミズン『歌うネアンデルタール—音楽と言語から見るヒトの進
化』(熊谷淳子訳、早川書房)
- Niven, L., Steele, T., Rendu, W. et al. (2012). Neandertal mobility
and largegame hunting: the exploitation of reindeer during the Quina
Mousterian at Chez-Pinaud Jonzac (Charente-Maritime, France). Journal
of Human Evolution 63: 624-35.
- Noonan, J. P., Coop, G., Kudaravalli, S. et al. (2006). Sequencing
and
analysis of Neanderthal genomic DNA. Science 314: 1113-18.
- Osaka City University (2011). Catalogue of Fossil Hominids Database.
http://gbs.ur-plaza.osaka-cu.ac.jp/kaseki/index.html.
- Pearce, E., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Latitudinal variation in
light
levels drives human visual system size. Biology Letters 8: 90-93.
- Pearce, E., Stringer, C., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). New insights
into
differences in brain organisation between Neanderthals and anatomically
modern humans. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 280B.
- Reed, K. E. (1997). Early hominid evolution and ecological change
through the African Plio-Pleistocene. Journal of Human Evolution 32:
289-322.
- Reed, K. E., and Russak, S. M. (2009). Tracking ecological change in
relation to the emergence of Homo near the Plio-Pleistocene boundary.
22 23
In: F. E. Grine, J. G. Fleagle and R. E. Leakey (eds) The First Humans:
Origin and Early Evolution of the Genus Homo , pp. 159-71. Berlin:
Springer.
- Reich, R., Green, R., Kircher, M. et al. (2010). Genetic history of
an
archaic hominin group from Denisova cave in Siberia. Nature 468: 1053-
60.
- Rhodes, J. A., and Churchill, S. E. (2009). Throwing in the Middle
and
Upper Paleolithic: inferences from an analysis of humeral retroversion.
Journal of Human Evolution 56: 1-10.
- Richards, M. P., and Trinkaus, E. (2009). Isotopic evidence for the
diets
of European Neanderthals and early modern humans. Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, USA 106: 16034-9.
- Richards, M. P., Pettitt, P. B., Trinkaus, E., Smith, F. H.,
Paunović, M.,
and Karavanić, I. (2000). Neanderthal diet at Vindija and Neanderthal
predation: the evidence from stable isotopes. Proceedings of the
National
Academy of Sciences, USA 97: 7663-6.
- Richards, M. P., Jacobi R., Cook, J., Pettitt, P. B., and Stringer,
C. B. (2005).
Isotope evidence for the intensive use of marine foods by Late Upper
Palaeolithic humans. Journal of Human Evolution 49: 390-94.
- Roach, N. T., Venkadesan, M., Rainbow, M. J., and Lieberman, D. E.
(2013). Elastic energy storage in the shoulder and the evolution of
highspeed
throwing in Homo . Nature 498: 483-7.
- Roberts, M. B., Stringer, C. B., and Parfitt, S. A. (1994). A hominid
tibia
from Middle Pleistocene sediments at Boxgrove, UK. Nature 369: 311-13.
- Roberts, S. B. G., Dunbar, R. I. M., Pollet, T., and Kuppens, T.
(2009). Exploring variations in active network size: constraints and
ego
characteristics. Social Networks 31: 138-46.
- Saladié, P., Huguet, R., Rodríguez-Hidalgo, A. et al. (2012).
Intergroup
cannibalism in the European Early Pleistocene: the range expansion and
imbalance of power hypotheses. Journal of Human Evolution 63: 682-95.
- Schmitt, D., Churchill, S. E., and Hylander, W. L. (2003).
Experimental
evidence concerning spear use in Neandertals and early modern humans.
Journal of Archaeological Science 30: 103-14.
- Sutcliffe, A., Dunbar, R. I. M., Binder, J., and Arrow, H. (2012).
Relationships and the social brain: integrating psychological and
evolutionary perspectives. British Journal of Psychology 103: 149-68.
- Thieme, H. (1998). The oldest spears in the world: Lower Palaeolithic
hunting weapons from Schöningen, Germany. In: E. Carbonell, J.
M. Bermudez de Castro, J. L. Arsuaga and X. P. Rodriguez (eds) Los
Primeros Pobladores de Europa [The First Europeans: Recent Discoveries
and Current Debate ], pp. 169-93. Aldecoa: Burgos.
- Thieme, H. (2005). The Lower Palaeolithic art of hunting: the case of
Schöningen 13 II-4, Lower Saxony, Germany. In: C. S. Gamble and
M. Porr (eds) The Hominid Individual in Context: Archaeological
Investigations of Lower and Middle Palaeolithic Landscapes, Locales and
Artefacts , pp. 115-32. London: Routledge.
- Vallverdú,, J., Allué, E., Bischoff, J. L. et al. (2005). Short human
occupations in the Middle Palaeolithic level I of the Abric Romaní
rockshelter
(Capellades, Barcelona, Spain). Journal of Human Evolution 48:
157-74.
- Vaquero, M., and Pastó, I. (2001). The definition of spatial units in
Middle Palaeolithic sites: the hearth related assemblages. Journal of
Archaeological Science 28: 1209-20.
- Vaquero, M., Vallverdú, J., Rosell, J.,Pastó, I., and Allué, E.
(2001).
Neandertal behavior at the Middle Palaeolithic site of Abric Romaní,
Capellades, Spain. Journal of Field Archaeology 28: 93-114.
- Weaver, T. D., and Hublin, J.-J. (2009). Neandertal birth canal shape
and
the evolution of human childbirth. Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, USA 106: 8151-6.
- Wilkins, J., Schoville, B. J., Brown, K. S., and Chazan, M. (2012).
Evidence for early hafted hunting technology. Science 338: 9426.
- Zollikofer, C. P. E., Ponce de León,, M. S., Vandermeersch, B., and
Lévêque, F. (2002). Evidence for interpersonal violence in the St
Césaire
Neanderthal. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 99:
6444-8.
◉第7章 第四移行期:現生人類
- Aiello, L. C. (1996). Terrestriality, bipedalism, and the origin of language. In: G. Runciman, J. Maynard-Smith and R. I. M. Dunbar (eds) Evolution of Social Behaviour Patterns in Primates and Man , pp. 269-89. Oxford: Oxford University Press. - Aiello, L. C., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1993). Neocortex size, group size and the evolution of language. Current Anthropology 34: 184-93. - Aiello, L. C., and Wheeler, P. (2003). Neanderthal thermoregulation and the glacial climate. In: T. H. van Andel and W. Davies (eds.) Neanderthals and Modern Humans in the European Landscape During the Late Glaciation . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. - Arensburg, B., Tillier, A. M., Vandermeersch, B., Duday, H., Schepartz, L. A., and Rak, Y. (1989). A Middle Palaeolithic human hyoid bone. Nature 338, 758-60. - Atkinson, Q. D., Gray, R. D., and Drummond, A. J. (2009). Bayesian coalescent inference of major human mitochondrial DNA haplogroup expansions in Africa. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 276B: 367-73. 24 25 - Bailey, D., and Geary, D. (2009). Hominid Brain Evolution. Human Nature 20: 67-79. - Balzeau, A., Holloway, R. L., and Grimaud-Hervé, D. (2012). Variations and asymmetries in regional brain surface in the genus Homo . Journal of Human Evolution 62: 696-706. - Barton, R. A., and Venditti, C. (2013). Human frontal lobes are not relatively large. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 111: 942-947. - Bruner, E., Manzi, G., and Arsuaga, J. L. (2003). Encephalization and allometric trajectories in the genus Homo : Evidence from the Neandertal and modern lineages. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 100: 15335-40. - Burke, A. (2012). Spatial abilities, cognition and the pattern of Neanderthal and modern human dispersals. Quaternary International 247: 230-35. - Caspari, R., and Lee, S.-H. (2004). Older age becomes common late in human evolution. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 101: 10895-900. - Comas, I., Coscolla, M., Luo, T. et al. (2013). Out-of-Africa migration and Neolithic coexpansion of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with modern humans. Nature Genetics 45: 1176-82. - Cowlishaw, G., and : Dunbar, R. I. M. (2000). Primate Conservation Biology. Chicago IL: Chicago University Press. - DaGusta, D., Gilbert, W. H., and Turner, S. P. (1999). Hypoglossal canal size and hominid speech. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 96: 1800-804. - Deacon, T. W. (1995). The Symbolic Species: The Coevolution of Language and the Human Brain . Harmondsworth: Allen Lane. テレンス・ W・ディーコン『ヒトはいかにして人となったか—言語と脳の共進化』(金 子隆芳訳、新曜社) - Dean, C., Leakey, M. G., Reid, D. et al. (2001). Growth processes in teeth distinguish modern humans from Homo erectus and earlier hominins. Nature 414: 628-31. - Dobson, S. D. (2009). Socioecological correlates of facial mobility in nonhuman anthropoids. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 139: 413-20. - Dobson, S. D. (2012). Face to face with the social brain. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 367B: 1901-8. - Dobson, S. D., and Sherwood, C. C. (2011). Correlated evolution of brain regions involved in producing and processing facial expressions in anthropoid primates. Biology Letters 7: 86-8. - Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Bridging the bonding gap: the transition from primates to humans. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London 367B: 1837-46. - Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shi, J. (2013). Time as a constraint on the distribution of feral goats at high latitudes. Oikos 122: 403-10. - Dunsworth, H. M., Warrener, A. G., Deacon, T., Ellison, P. T., and Pontzer, H. (2012). Metabolic hypothesis for human altriciality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 109: 15212-16. - Enard, W., Przeworski, M., Fisher, S. E. et al. (2002). Molecular evolution of FOXP2, a gene involved in speech and language. Nature 418: 869-72. - Féblot-Augustins, J. (1993). Mobility strategies in the Late Middle Palaeolithic of central Europe and western Europe: elements of stability and variability. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 12: 211-65. - Finlay, B. L., Darlington, R. B., and Nicastro, N. (2001). Developmental structure in brain evolution. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24: 263-308. - Finlayson, C. (2010). The Humans Who Went Extinct: Why Neanderthals Died Out and We Survived . Oxford: Oxford University Press. クライブ・フ ィンレイソン『そして最後にヒトが残った—ネアンデルタール人と私たちの 50 万年史』(上原直子訳、白揚社) - Fisher, S. E., and Marcus, G. F. (2006). The eloquent ape: genes, brains and the evolution of language. Nature Reviews Genetics 7: 9-20. - Freeberg, T. M. (2006). Social complexity can drive vocal complexity. Psychological Science 17: 557-61. - Goebel, T., Waters, M. R., and O’Rourke, D. H. (2008). The late Pleistocene dispersal of modern humans in the Americas. Science 319: 1497-502. - Haesler, S., Rochefort, C., Georgi, B., Licznerski, P., Osten, P., and Scharff, C. (2007). Incomplete and inaccurate vocal imitation after knockdown of FoxP2 in songbird basal ganglia nucleus Area X. PLoS Biology 5: e321. - Helgason, A., Hickey, E., Goodacre, S. et al. (2001). mtDNA and the islands of the North Atlantic: estimating the proportions of Norse and Gaelic ancestry. American Journal of Human Genetics 68: 723-37. - Helgason, A., Sigurðardóttir, S., Gulcher, J. R., Ward, R., and Stefánsson, K. (2000). mtDNA and the origin of the Icelanders: deciphering signals of recent population history. American Journal of Human Genetics 66: 999- 1016. - Henn, B., Gignoux, C., Jobin, M. et al. (2011). Hunter-gatherer genomic diversity suggests a southern African origin for modern humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 108: 5154-62. - Horan, R. D., Bulte, E., and Shogren, J. F. (2005). How trade saved humanity from biological exclusion: an economic theory of Neanderthal extinction. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 58: 1-29. 26 27 - Ingman, M., Kaessmann, H., Pääbo, S., and Gyllensten, U. (2000). Mitochondrial genome variation and the origin of modern humans. Nature , London 408: 708-13. - Joffe, T. H. (1997). Social pressures have selected for an extended juvenile period in primates. Journal of Human Evolution 32: 593-605. - Jungers, W. L., Pokempner, A., Kay, R. F., and Cartmill, M. (2003). Hypoglossal canal size in living hominoids and the evolution of human speech. Human Biology 75: 473-84. - Kay, R. F., Cartmill, M., and Balow, M. (1998). The hypoglossal canal and the origin of human vocal behaviour. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 95: 5417–19. - Klein, R. G. (2000). The Human Career: Human Biological and Cultural Origins , 3rd edition. Chicago: Chicago University Press. - Krause, J., Lalueza-Fox, C., Orlando, L. et al. (2007). The derived FoxP2 variant of modern humans was shared with Neanderthals. Current Biology 17: 1908-12. - Lahr, M. M., and Foley, R. (1994). Multiple dispersals and modern human origins. Evolutionary Anthropology 3: 48-60. - Lewis, P. A., Rezaie, R., Browne, R., Roberts, N., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). Ventromedial prefrontal volume predicts understanding of others and social network size. NeuroImage 57: 1624-9. - McComb, K., and Semple, S. (2005). Coevolution of vocal communication and sociality in primates. Biology Letters 1: 381–5. - MacLarnon, A., and Hewitt, G. (1999). The evolution of human speech: the role of enhanced breathing control. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 109: 341-63. - Martín-González, J., Mateos, A., Goikoetxea, I., Leonard, W., and Rodríguez, J. (2012). Differences between Neandertal and modern human infant and child growth models. Journal of Human Evolution 63: 140-49. - Martinez, I., Rosa, M., Jarabo, P. et al. (2004). Auditory capacities in Middle Pleistocene humans from the Sierra de Atapuerca in Spain. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 101: 9976-81. - Noble, W., and Davidson, I. (1991). The evolutionary emergence of modern human behaviour. I. Language and its archaeology. Man 26: 222-53. - Osaka City University (2011). Catalogue of Fossil Hominids Database. http://gbs.ur-plaza.osaka-cu.ac.jp/kaseki/index.html - Powell, J., Lewis, P. A., Dunbar, R. I. M., García-Fiñana, M., and Roberts, N. (2010). Orbital prefrontal cortex volume correlates with social cognitive competence. Neuropsychologia 48: 3554-62. - Richards, M. P., and Trinkaus, E. (2009). Isotopic evidence for the diets of European Neanderthals and early modern humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 38: 16034-9. - Semendeferi, K., Damasio, H., Frank, R., and Van Hoesen, G. W. (1997). The evolution of the frontal lobes: a volumetric analysis based on threedimensional reconstructions of magnetic resonance scans of human and ape brains. Journal of Human Evolution 32: 375-88. - Slimak, L., and Giraud, Y. (2007). Circulations sur plusieurs centaines de kilomètresdurant le Paléolithiqu moyen. Contribution à la connaissance des sociétés néandertaliennes. Comptes Rendus Palevol 6: 359-68. - Smith, T. M., Tafforeau, P., Reid, D. J. et al. (2007). Earliest evidence of modern human life history in North African early Homo sapiens . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 104: 6128-33. - Stedman, H. H., Kozyak, B. W., Nelson, A. et al. (2004). Myosin gene mutation correlates with anatomical changes in the human lineage. Nature 428: 415-18. - Stoneking, M. (1993). DNA and recent human evolution. Evolutionary Anthropology 2: 60-73. - Shultz, A., and Maslin, M. (2013). Early human speciation, brain expansion and dispersal influenced by African climate pulses. PLoS One 8: e76750. - Thomas, M. G., Stumpf, M. P. H., and H.rke, H. (2006). Evidence for an apartheid-like social structure in early Anglo-Saxon England. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 273B: 2651-7. - Toups, M. A., Kitchen, A., Light, J. E., and Reed, D. L. (2011). Origin of clothing lice indicates early clothing use by anatomically modern humans in Africa. Molecular Biology and Evolution 28: 29-32. - Uomini, N. T. (2009). The prehistory of handedness: archaeological data and comparative ethology. Journal of Human Evolution 57: 411-19. - Uomini, N., and Meyer, G. (2013). Shared brain lateralization patterns in language and Acheulean stone tool production: a functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound study. PLoS One 8: e72693. - Williams, A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Big brains, meat, tuberculosis, and the nicotinamide switches: co-evolutionary relationships with modern repercussions? International Journal of Tryptophan Research 3: 73-88. - Zerjal, T., Xue, Y., Bertorelle, G. et al.(2003). The genetic legacy of the Mongols. American Journal of Human Genetics 72: 717-21.
◉第8章 血縁、言語、文化の成り立ち
- Bader, N. O., and Lavrushin Y. A. (eds)
(1998). Upper Palaeolithic
Site Sungir (graves and environmen t) (Posdnepaleolitischeskoje
posselenije
Sungir ). Moscow: Scientific World.
28 29
- Bailey, D., and Geary, D. (2009). Hominid Brain Evolution. Human
Nature 20: 67-9.
- Boyer, P. (2001). Religion Explained: The Human Instincts That
Fashion
Gods, Spirits and Ancestors . London: Weidenfeld & Nicholson. パスカル・
ボイヤー『神はなぜいるのか? (叢書コムニス6)』(鈴木光太郎・中村潔訳、
エヌティティ出版)
- Burton-Chellew, M., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). Are affines treated
as
biological kin? A test of Hughes’ hypothesis. Current Anthropology 52:
741-6.
- Cashmore, L., Uomini, N., and Chapelain, A. (2008). The evolution
of handedness in humans and great apes: a review and current issues.
Journal of Anthropological Science 86: 7-35.
- Conard, N. J. (2003). Palaeolithic ivory sculptures from southwestern
Germany and the origins of figurative art. Nature 426: 830-83.
- Curry, O., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Do birds of a feather flock
together? The relationship between similarity and altruism in social
networks. Human Nature 24: 336-47.
- Curry, O., Roberts, S., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Altruism in
social
networks: evidence for a ‘kinship premium’. British Journal of
Psychology
104: 283-95.
- D’Errico, F., Henshilwood, C., Vanhaeren, M., and van Niekerk, K.
(2005).
Nassarius kraussianus shell beads from Blombos Cave: evidence for
symbolic behaviour in the Middle Stone Age. Journal of Human Evolution
48: 3-24.
- Deacon, T. W. (1995). The Symbolic Species: The Coevolution of
Language and the Human Brain . Harmondsworth: Allen Lane. テレンス・
W・ディーコン『ヒトはいかにして人となったか—言語と脳の共進化』(金
子隆芳訳、新曜社)
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1993). Coevolution of neocortex size, group size,
and
language in humans. Behavioral Brain Sciences 16: 681-735.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1995). On the evolution of language and kinship.
In: J.
Steele and S. Shennan (eds) The Archaeology of Human Ancestry: Power,
Sex and Tradition , pp. 380-96. London: Routledge.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (1996). Grooming, Gossip and the Evolution of
Language .
London: Faber & Faber. ロビン・ダンバー『ことばの起源—猿の毛づくろい、
人のゴシップ』(松浦俊輔・服部清美訳、青土社)
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2008). Mind the gap: or why humans aren’t just
great
apes. Proceedings of the British Academy 154: 403-23.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2009). Why only humans have language. In: R. Botha
and C. Knight (eds) The Prehistory of Language , pp. 12-35. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). The origin of religion as a small scale
phenomenon.In: S. Clark and R. Powell (eds) Religion, Intolerance and
Conflict: A Scientific and Conceptual Investigation , pp. 48-66.
Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
- Fincher, C. L., and Thornhill, R. (2008). Assortative sociality,
limited
dispersal, infectious disease and the genesis of the global pattern of
religion diversity. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London 275B:
2587-
94.
- Fincher, C. L., Thornhill, R., Murray, D. R., and Schaller, M.
(2008).
Pathogen prevalence predicts human cross-cultural variability in
individualism/collectivism. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London
275B: 1279-85.
- Frankel, B. G., and Hewitt, W. E. (1994). Religion and well-being
among
Canadian university students: the role of faith groups on campus.
Journal
of the Scientific Study of Religion 33: 62-73.
- Hamilton, W. D. (1964). The genetical evolution of social behaviour.
I, II.
Journal of Theoretical Biology 7: 1-52.
- Henshilwood, C. S., d’Errico, F., van Niekerk, K. L. et al. (2011). A
100,000-Year-Old Ochre-Processing Workshop at Blombos Cave, South
Africa. Science 334: 219-22.
- Henshilwood, C. S., d’Errico, F., Yates, R. et al. (2002). Emergence
of
modern human behavior: Middle Stone Age engravings from South
Africa. Science 295: 1278-80.
- Hughes, A. (1988). Kinship and Human Evolution . Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
- Klein, R. G. (2000). The Human Career: Human Biological and Cultural
Origins , 3rd edition. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
- Koenig, H. G., and Cohen, H. J. (eds) (2002). The Link Between
Religion
and Health: Psychoneuroimmunology and the Faith Factor. Oxford
University Press: Oxford.
- Kudo, H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2001). Neocortex size and social
network
size in primates. Animal Behaviour 62: 711-22.
- Layton, R., O’Hara, S., and Bilsborough, A. (2012). Antiquity and
social
functions of multilevel social organization among human
huntergatherers.
International Journal of Primatology 33: 1215-45.
- Lehmann, J., Lee, P. C., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Unravelling the
evolutionary function of communities. In: R. I. M. Dunbar, C. Gamble
and J. A. J. Gowlett (eds) Lucy to Language: The Benchmark Papers , pp.
245-76. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Lewis-Williams, D. (2002). The Mind in the Cave. London: Thames &
Hudson. Mesoudi, A., Whiten, A., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2006). A bias
for social information in human cultural transmission. British Journal
of
Psychology 97: 405-23.
30 31
- Mickes, L., Darby, R. S., Hwe, V. et al. (2013). Major memory for
microblogs. Memory and Cognition 41: 481-89.
- Miller, G. (1999). Sexual selection for cultural displays. In R. I.
M.
Dunbar, C. Knight and C. Power (eds) The Evolution of Culture , pp. 71-
91. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
- Nettle, D. (1999). Linguistic Diversity. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
- Nettle, D., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1997). Social markers and the
evolution
of reciprocal exchange. Current Anthropology 38: 93-9.481-89.
- Osaka City University (2011). Catalogue of Fossil Hominids Database.
http://gbs.ur-plaza.osaka-cu.ac.jp/kaseki/index.html
- Palmer, C. T. (1991). Kin selection, reciprocal altruism and
information
sharing among Maine lobstermen. Ethology and Sociobiology 12: 221-35.
- Redhead, G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). The functions of language:
an
experimental study. Evolutionary Psychology 11: 845-54.
- Rouget, G. (1985). Music and Trance: A Theory of the Relations
Between
Music and Possession . Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Silk, J. B. (1980). Adoption and kinship in Oceania. A merican
Anthropologist 82: 799-820.
- Silk, J. B. (1990). Which humans adopt adaptively and why does it
matter? Ethology and Sociobiology 11: 425-6.
- Thornhill, R., Fincher, C. L., and Aran, D. (2009). Parasites,
democratization, and the liberalization of values across contemporary
countries. Biology Reviews 84: 113-31.
- Wiessner, P. (2002). Hunting, healing, and hxaro exchange: a
long-term
perspective on !Kung (Ju/’hoansi) large-game hunting. Evolution and
Human Behavior 23: 1-30.
◉第9章 第五移行期:新石器時代以降
- Andelman, S. (1986). Ecological and social
determinants of
cercopithecine mating patterns. In: D. I. Rubenstein and R. W.
Wrangham (eds) Ecological Aspects of Social Evolution , pp. 201-16.
Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press.
- Atkinson, Q. D., and Bourrat, P. (2011). Beliefs about God, the
afterlife
and morality support the role of supernatural policing in human
cooperation. Evolution and Human Behavior 32: 41-9.
- Bourrat, P., Atkinson, Q. D., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011).
Supernatural
punishment and individual social compliance across cultures. Religion,
Brain and Behavior 1: 119-34.
- Bowles, S. (2009). Did warfare among ancestral hunter-gatherers
affect the
evolution of human social behaviors? Science 324: 1293-8.
- Bowles, S. (2011). Cultivation of cereals by the first farmers was
not
more productive than foraging. Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, USA 108: 4760-65.
- Bugos, P., and McCarthy, L. (1984). Ayoreo infanticide: a case study.
In: G.
Hausfater and S. B. Hrdy (eds) Infanticide: Comparative and
Evolutionary
Perspectives , pp. 503–20. Hawthorne: Aldine de Gruyter.
- Caspari, R., and Lee, S.-H. (2004). Older age becomes common late in
human evolution. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA
101: 10895-900.
- Cohen, M. N., and Crane-Kramer, G. (2007). Ancient Health: Skeletal
Indicators of Agricultural and Economic Intensification . Gainesville,
FL:
University Press of Florida.
- Coward, F., and Dunbar , R. I. M. (2013). Communities on the edge of
civilisation. In: R. I. M. Dunbar, C. Gamble and J. A. J. Gowlett
(eds.)
Lucy to Language: The Benchmark Papers , pp. 380-405. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
- Curry, O., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). Altruism in networks: the
effect of
connections. Biology Letters 7: 651-3.
- Curry, O., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Do birds of a feather flock
together? The relationship between similarity and altruism in social
networks. Human Nature 24: 336-47.
- Curry, O., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). Sharing a joke: the effects
of a
similar sense of humor on affiliation and altruism. Evolution and Human
Behavior 34: 125-9.
- Daly, M., and Wilson, M. (1981). Abuse and neglect of children in
evolutionary perspective. In: R. D. Alexander and D. W. Tinkle (eds)
Natural Selection and Social Behavior, pp. 405-16. New York: Chiron
Press.
- Daly, M., and Wilson, M. (1984). A sociobiological analysis of human
infanticide. In: G. Hausfater and S. B. Hrdy (eds) Infanticide:
Comparative and Evolutionary Perspectives , pp. 487-502. New York:
Aldine de Gruyter.
- Daly, M., and Wilson, M. (1985). Child abuse and other risks of not
living
with both parents. Ethology and Sociobiology 6: 197-210.
- Daly, M., and Wilson, M. (1988). Evolutionary psychology and family
homicide. Science 242: 519-24.
- Diamond, J. (2002). Evolution, consequences and future of plant and
animal domestication. Nature 418: 700-707.
- Dietrich, O., Heun, M., Notroff, J., Schmidt, K., and Zarnkow, M.
(2012).
The role of cult and feasting in the emergence of Neolithic
communities.
New evidence from G.bekli Tepe, south-eastern Turkey. Antiquity 86:
674-95.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2000). Male mating strategies: a modelling
approach.
In: P. Kappeler (ed.) Primate Males , pp. 259-68. Cambridge: Cambridge
32 33
University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2010). Deacon’s dilemma: the problem of pairbonding
in human evolution. In: R. I. M. Dunbar, C. Gamble and J. A. J. Gowlett
(eds.) Social Brain, Distributed Mind , pp. 159-79. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). The Science of Love and Betrayal . London:
Faber
& Faber.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2012). Social cognition on the internet: testing
constraints on social network size. Philosophical Transactions of the
Royal Society, London 367B: 2192-2201.
- Dunbar, R. I. M. (2013). The origin of religion as a small scale
phenomenon. In: S. Clark and R. Powell (eds) Religion, Intolerance and
Conflict: A Scientific and Conceptual Investigation , pp. 48-66.
Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
- Dunbar, R. I. M., Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Gowlett, J. A.
J.
(2014). The road to modern humans: time budgets, fission-fusion
sociality, kinship and the division of labour in hominin evolution. In:
R.
I. M. Dunbar, C. Gamble and J. A. J. Gowlett (eds) Lucy to Language:
The Benchmark Papers , pp. 333-55. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Ember, C. R., Adem, T. A., and Skoggard, I. (2013). Risk,
uncertainty,
and violence in Eastern Africa: a regional comparison. Human Nature
24: 33-58.
- Fehr, E., and Gächter, S. (2002). Altruistic punishment in humans.
Nature
415: 137-40.
- Fibiger, L., Ahlstr.m, T., Bennike, P., and Schulting, R. J. (2013).
Patterns
of violence-related skull trauma in Neolithic southern Scandinavia.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology 150: 190–-02.
- Fisher, H. E., Aron, A., and Brown, L. L. (2006). Romantic love: a
mammalian brain system for mate choice. Philosophical Transactions of
the Royal Society, London 361B: 2173-86.
- Harcourt, A. H., Harvey, P. H., Larson, S. G., and Short, R. V.
(1981).
Testis weight, body weight and breeding system in primates. Nature 293:
55-7.
- Henrich, J., Ensminger, J., McElreath, R. et al. (2010). Markets,
religion,
community size, and the evolution of fairness and punishment. Science
327: 1480-84.
- Hewlett, B. S. (1988). Sexual selection and paternal investment among
Aka pygmies. In: L. Betzig, M. Borgerhoff-Mulder and P. Turke (eds)
Human Reproductive Behaviou r, pp. 263-75. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
- Jankowiak, W. R., and Fischer, E. F. (1992). A cross-cultural
perspective
on romantic love. Ethnology 31: 149-55.
- Johnson, A. W., and Earle, T. K. (2001). The Evolution of Human
Societies: From Foraging Group to Agrarian State , 2nd edition. Palo
Alto,
CA: Stanford University Press.
- Johnson, D. D. P. (2005). God’s punishment and public goods: a test
of
the supernatural punishment hypothesis in 186 world cultures. Human
Nature 16: 410-46.
- Johnson, D. D. P., and Bering, J. (2009). Hand of God, mind of man.
In: J. Schloss and M. J. Murray (eds), The Believing Primate:
Scientific,
Philosophical, and Theological Reflections on the Origin of Religion ,
pp.
26-44. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Knott, C. D., and Kahlenberg, S. M. (2007). Orangutans in
perspective:
forced copulations and female mating resistance. In: C. J. Campbell, A.
Fuentes, K. C. MacKinnon, M. Panger and S. K. Bearder (2007). Primates
in Perspective , pp. 290-305. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Lehmann, J., Korstjens, A. H., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2007).
Fissionfusion
social systems as a strategy for coping with ecological constraints:
a primate case. Evolutionary Ecology 21: 613-34.
- Lukas, D., and Clutton-Brock, T. H. (2013). The evolution of social
monogamy in mammals. Science 341: 526-30.
- Manning, J. T. (2002). Digit Ratio: A Pointer to Fertility, Health,
and
Behavior. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
- Mesnick, S. L. (1997). Sexual alliances: evidence and evolutionary
implications. In: P. A. Gowaty (ed.) Feminism and Evolutionary Biology,
pp. 207-60. London: Chapman & Hall.
- Munro, N. D., and Grosman L. (2010). Early evidence (ca. 12,000 B.P.)
for feasting at a burial cave in Israel. Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, USA 107: 15362-6.
- Naroll, R. (1956). A preliminary index of social development.
American
Anthropologist 58: 687-715.
- Nelson, E., Rolian, C., Cashmore, L., and Shultz, S. (2011). Digit
ratios
predict polygyny in early apes, Ardipithecus, Neanderthals and early
modern humans but not in Australopithecus. Proceedings of the Royal
Society, London 278B: 1556-63.
- Nettle, D., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1997). Social markers and the
evolution
of reciprocal exchange. Current Anthropology 38: 93-9.
- Norenzayan, A., and Shariff, A. F. (2008). The origin and evolution
of
religious prosociality. Science 322: 58-62.
- Opie, C., Atkinson, Q. D., Dunbar, R. I. M., and Shultz, S. (2013).
Male
infanticide leads to social monogamy in primates. Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, USA 110: 13328-32.
- Palchykov, V., Kaski, K., Kertész, J., Barabási A.-L., and Dunbar, R.
I. M.
(2012). Sex differences in intimate relationships. Scientific Reports
2:
34 35
320.
- Palchykov, V.,Kertész,, J., Dunbar, R. I. M., and Kaski, K. (2013).
Close
relationships: a study of mobile communication records. Journal of
Statistical Physics 151: 735-44.
- Pérusse, D. (1993). Cultural and reproductive success in industrial
societies: testing the relationship at the proximate and ultimate
levels.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16: 267-322.
- Putnam, R. D. (2000). Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of
American Community. New York: Simon and Schuster.
- Reno, P. L., Meindl, R. S, McCollum, M. A., and Lovejoy, C. O.
(2003).
Sexual dimorphism in Australopithecus afarensis was similar to that
of modern humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
USA 100: 9404-9
- Roberts, S. B. G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). The costs of family
and
friends: an 18-month longitudinal study of relationship maintenance and
decay. Evolution and Human Behavior 32: 186-97.
- Roberts, S. B. G., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (2011). Communication in
social
networks: effects of kinship, network size and emotional closeness.
Personal Relationships 18: 439-52.
- Roes, F. L., and Raymond, M. (2003). Belief in moralizing gods.
Evolution
and Human Behavior 24: 126-35.
- van Schaik, C. P., and Dunbar, R. I. M. (1991). The evolution of
monogamy in large primates: a new hypothesis and some critical tests.
Behaviour 115: 30-62.
- Sosis, R., and Alcorta, C. (2003). Signaling, solidarity, and the
sacred: the
evolution of religious behavior. Evolutionary Anthropology 12: 264-74.
- Stanford, D., and Bradley, B. (2002). Ocean trails and prairie paths?
Thoughts about Clovis origins. In: N. G. Jablonski (ed.) The First
Americans: The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World , pp. 255-71.
San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences.
- Sutcliffe, A., Dunbar, R. I. M., Binder, J., and Arrow, H. (2012).
Relationships and the social brain: integrating psychological and
evolutionary perspectives. British Journal of Psychology 103: 149-68.
- Ulijaszek, S. J. (1991). Human dietary change. Philosophical
Transactions
of the Royal Society, London 334B: 271-9.
- Voland, E., and Engel, C. (1989). Women’s reproduction and longevity
in a premodern population (Ostfriesland, Germany, 18th century). In: A.
E. Rasa, C. Vogel and E. Voland (eds.) The Sociobiology of Sexual and
Reproductive Strategies , pp. 194-205. London: Chapman & Hall.
- Walker, R. S., and Bailey, D. H. (2013). Body counts in lowland South
American violence. Evolution and Human Behavior 34: 29-34.
- Watts, D. P. (1989). Infanticide in mountain gorillas: new cases and
a
reconsideration of the evidence. Ethology 81: 1-18.
- Wilson, M., and Mesnick, S. L. (1997). An empirical test of the
bodyguard
hypothesis. In: P. A. Gowaty (ed.) Feminism and Evolutionary Biology.
London: Chapman & Hall.