Paper: The Solitary Forager Hypothesis

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TPE2
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06 Jun 2011, 12:57 pm

"Conceptualizing the Autism Spectrum in Terms of Natural Selection and Behavioral Ecology: The Solitary Forager Hypothesis"

http://www.epjournal.net/filestore/EP092072382.pdf

Quote:

Abstract:
This article reviews etiological and comparative evidence supporting the hypothesis that some genes associated with the autism spectrum were naturally selected and represent the adaptive benefits of being cognitively suited for solitary foraging. People on the autism spectrum are conceptualized here as ecologically competent individuals that could have been adept at learning and implementing hunting and gathering skills in the ancestral environment. Upon independence from their mothers, individuals on the autism spectrum may have been psychologically predisposed toward a different life-history strategy, common among mammals and even some primates, to hunt and gather primarily on their own. Many of the behavioral and cognitive tendencies that autistic individuals exhibit are viewed here as adaptations that would have complemented a solitary lifestyle. For example, the obsessive, repetitive and systemizing tendencies in autism, which can be mistakenly applied toward activities such as block stacking today, may have been focused by hunger and thirst toward successful food procurement in the ancestral past. Both solitary mammals and autistic individuals are low on measures of gregariousness, socialization, direct gazing, eye contact, facial expression, facial recognition, emotional engagement, affiliative need and other social behaviors. The evolution of the neurological tendencies in solitary species that predispose them toward being introverted and reclusive may hold important clues for the evolution of the autism spectrum and the natural selection of autism genes. Solitary animals are thought to eschew unnecessary social contact as part of a foraging strategy often due to scarcity and wide dispersal of food in their native environments. It is thought that the human ancestral environment was often nutritionally sparse as well, and this may have driven human parties to periodically disband. Inconsistencies in group size must have led to inconsistencies in the manner in which natural selection fashioned the social minds of humans, which in turn may well be responsible for the large variation in social abilities seen in human populations. This article emphasizes that individuals on the autism spectrum may have only been partially solitary, that natural selection may have only favored subclinical autistic traits and that the most severe cases of autism may be due to assortative mating.



Kon
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06 Jun 2011, 1:18 pm

That paper has been discussed here:

http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt163789.html



wavefreak58
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06 Jun 2011, 3:00 pm

I've not thought such speculations were of much value. We can't possibly know the states of mind of ancient hunter/gatherers. So this is essentially projecting our own thoughts of how they might approach daily tasks onto our current perceptions of how autism might fit in. Since we currently have no genetic markers for autism, we can't even do any mitochondrial DNA analysis to see if there is some persistence in the genome of those traits. So the premise that the genetics that express autistic traits existed in pre-historical humans is an unfounded assumption to begin with.

Seems to me that good science would start by finding the genetic markers of autism, showing they have been present for many millennia, and then discussing how they may have been of sufficient utility, or at least sufficiently benign, to have not been selected against.

Meh.


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06 Jun 2011, 5:12 pm

I may be an unsociable gruff rogue male, but boy can I put meat on the table for you to share with me. And I can root like a rattlesnake from all my built up angst and desire.

Anyone want to have my baby?