PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Smolla, Marco AU - Akçay, Erol TI - Cultural Selection Shapes Network Structure AID - 10.1101/464883 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 464883 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/11/08/464883.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/11/08/464883.full AB - Cultural evolution relies on the social transmission of cultural traits across a population, along the ties of an underlying social network that emerges from non-random interactions among individuals. Research indicates that the structure of those interaction networks affects information spread, and thus a population’s ability for cumulative culture. However, how network structure itself is driven by population-culture co-evolution remains largely unclear. We use a simple but realistic model of complex dynamic social networks to investigate how populations negotiate the trade-off between acquiring new skills and getting better at existing skills, and how this trade-off, in turn, shapes the social structure of the population. Our results reveal unexpected eco-evolutionary feedback from culture onto social network structure and vice versa. We show that selecting for generalists (favouring a broad repertoire of skills) results in sparsely connected networks with highly diverse skill sets, whereas selecting for specialists (favouring skill proficiency) results in densely connected networks and a population that specializes on the same few skills on which everyone is an expert. Surprisingly, cultural selection for specialisation can act as an “ecological trap” where it can take a long time for a specialist population to adapt to a generalist world. Our model advances our understanding of the complex feedbacks in cultural evolution and demonstrates how individual-level behaviour can lead to the emergence of population-level structure.