info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Robustness assessment of the ‘cooperation under resource pressure’ (CURP) model: Insights on resource availability and sharing practices among hunter-gatherers
Fecha
2019-04Registro en:
Zurro Hernández, Débora; Ahedo, Virginia; Pereda, María Dolores; Alvarez, Myrian Rosa; Briz Godino, Ivan; et al.; Robustness assessment of the ‘cooperation under resource pressure’ (CURP) model: Insights on resource availability and sharing practices among hunter-gatherers; Liverpool University Press; Hunter Gatherer Research; 3; 3; 4-2019; 401-428
2056-3264
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Zurro Hernández, Débora
Ahedo, Virginia
Pereda, María Dolores
Alvarez, Myrian Rosa
Briz Godino, Ivan
Carozzi, Jorge Alberto
Santos, José Ignacio
Galán, José Manuel
Resumen
A well-known challenge in archaeological research is the exploration of the social mechanisms that hunter-gatherers may have implemented throughout history to deal with changes in resource availability. the agent-based model (ABM) ‘cooperation under resource pressure’ (CURP) was conceived to explore food stress episodes in societies lacking a food preservation technology. It was particularly aimed at understanding how cooperative behaviours in the form of food sharing practices emerge, increase and may become the prevailing strategy in relation to changes in resource availability and expectancy of reciprocity. CURP’s main outcome is the identification of three regimes of behaviour depending on the stress level. In this work, the model’s robustness to the original selection mechanism (random tournament) is assessed, as different dynamics can lead to different persistent regimes. For that purpose, three other selection mechanisms are implemented and evaluated, to identify the prevailing states of the system. Results show that the three regimes are robust irrespective of the analysed dynamics. We consequently examine in more detail the long-term archaeological implications that these results may have.