Identifying Signatures of Selection in Archaeological Sequences
Author(s): Ben Marwick; Liying Wang
Year: 2019
Summary
This is an abstract from the "Practical Approaches to Identifying Evolutionary Processes in the Archaeological Record" session, at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.
Both neutral drift and selection cause the frequencies of artefact types in a archaeological sequences to vary over time. Discriminating between these two processes, based on a time series of artefacts from a site or region, if often important for answering archaeological questions. However, archaeologists have few tools available for detecting if there is a significant signal of selection for a specific artefact type over time. We draw on recent work in population genetics to explore statistical methods for detecting selection in archaeological assemblages. Here we present an archaeological application of the frequency increment test (FIT), which rejects neutrality if the distribution of normalized artefact-type-frequency increments exhibits a mean that deviates significantly from zero.
Cite this Record
Identifying Signatures of Selection in Archaeological Sequences. Ben Marwick, Liying Wang. Presented at The 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Albuquerque, NM. 2019 ( tDAR id: 451983)
This Resource is Part of the Following Collections
Keywords
General
Cultural Transmission
Record Identifiers
Abstract Id(s): 23656