Skip to main content
Presentation
Optimal Foraging and Ephemeral Group Formation: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Jenu Kuruba Honey Collectors and 19th C. Silver Prospectors
112th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association (2013)
  • Kathryn Demps, Boise State University
Abstract

Contrary to the logic of economic foraging, researchers find little evidence that per capita yields are the most important factor in determining size and composition of ephemeral work groups. Variation in patch size and uncertainty about returns contribute to variation in group sizes in addition to social and cultural concerns like kinship, reputation and pleasure. Models that only incorporate economic parameters make poor predictions of how humans interact with their environments.

Disciplines
Publication Date
November 20, 2013
Citation Information
Kathryn Demps. "Optimal Foraging and Ephemeral Group Formation: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Jenu Kuruba Honey Collectors and 19th C. Silver Prospectors" 112th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/kathryn_demps/9/