

Author: Brown C. Laland K.N.
Publisher: Elsevier
ISSN: 0003-3472
Source: Animal Behaviour, Vol.64, Iss.1, 2002-07, pp. : 41-47
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Abstract
Studies of social learning suggest that many animals are disproportionately likely to adopt the behaviour of the majority, and that this conformist transmission hinders the spread of novel behavioural variants. However, novel learned behaviour patterns regularly diffuse through animal populations. We propose a hypothesis, termed the ‘social release hypothesis’, that resolves these apparently conflicting findings by suggesting that animals are released from conforming to traditional behaviour in the absence of demonstrators. We investigated the role of pretrained, female demonstrator guppies,
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