Masculinity and the Mechanisms of Human Self-Domestication. Ben Thomas
Gleeson. Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology, Jan 6 2020.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40750-019-00126-z
Abstract
Objectives:
Pre-historic decline in human craniofacial masculinity has been
proposed as evidence of selection against reactive aggression and a
process of ‘human self-domestication’ thought to have promoted complex
capacities including language, culture, and cumulative technological
development. This follows observations of similar morphological changes
in non-human animals under selection for reduced aggression. Two
distinct domestication hypotheses posit developmental explanations;
involving dampened migration of embryonic neural crest cells (NCCs), and
declining androgen influences, respectively. Here, I assess the
operation and potential interaction of these two mechanisms and consider
their role in human adaptation to a cooperative sociocultural niche.
Methods:
I provide a review and synthesis of related literature with a focus on
physiological mechanisms affecting domesticated reductions in
masculinity and sexual dimorphism. Further, I examine several modes of
pre-historic sociosexual selection against aggressive reactivity which
are proposed to have driven human self-domestication.
Results: I
show that pluripotent NCCs provide progenitors for a wide range of
vertebrate masculine features, acting as regular targets for sexually
driven evolutionary change. This suggests hypoplasia of NCC-derived
tissues due to dampened NCC migration is sufficient to explain declines
in lineage specific masculine traits and features under domestication.
However, lineage-specific androgen receptor variability likely moderates
hypoplasia in NCC-derived tissues, and may influence NCC migration,
though this latter influence requires further investigation.
Conclusions:
These findings synthesise and extend theorised physiological mechanisms
of domestication and human self-domestication. Self-domestication under
sociosexual selection for dampened reactive aggression and correlated
masculine physiology enabled human adaptation to an increasingly complex
sociocultural niche. The analysis highlights several avenues for
further productive investigation.
No comments:
Post a Comment