Published September 3, 2024 | Version v2
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Code accompanying the paper 'Signatures of selection with cultural interference'

  • 1. ROR icon Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology

Description

Human evolution is intricately linked with culture, which permeates almost all facets of human life from health and reproduction, to the environments in which we live. Nevertheless, our understanding of the ways in which stably transmitted, evolutionarily relevant human cultural traits might interact with the human genome is incomplete, and methods to detect such interactions are limited. Here we describe some rules of cultural transmission which could pertain to both humans and cultural non-human animals that could lead to the formation and maintenance of stable associations between cultural and genetic traits. Next we show that, in the presence of such associations, a process analogous to genetic hitchhiking is possible in gene-culture systems. These could leave signatures in the human genome similar to, and perhaps indistinguishable from, those left by selection on genetic traits. Finally, we model selective interference between cultural and genetic traits. We show that selective interference between a cultural trait under selection and a genetic trait under selection can reduce the efficacy of natural selection in the human genome, both in terms of the probability of fixation of beneficial alleles and the dynamics of selective sweeps. We go on to show that the efficiency of selection at genetic loci can, however, be increased in the presence of strong cultural transmission biases. This implies that the signatures of gene-culture interactions in genetic data may be complex and wide-ranging in gene-culture co-evolutionary systems.

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