Claudio Tennie
@ctennie.bsky.social
3.8K followers 1.2K following 170 posts
Group Leader, Uni Tübingen | Humans, hominins, and apes | Evolution of human cultural evolution -> When and how did we get from ape-like cultures to deep & broad open-ended cultural evolution? https://sites.google.com/view/claudiotennie
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ctennie.bsky.social
Bsky is growing - follower lists do, too.

Let me introduce myself.

I study archaeology, biology & psychology. The common theme: evolution of cultural evolution (especially of: tools).

Two recent interviews give an overview:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8UK...

&

www.youtube.com/watch?v=FB31...
#700 Claudio Tennie: Tool Behaviors in Great Apes, Cultural Transmission, and Cumulative Culture
YouTube video by The Dissenter
www.youtube.com
Reposted by Claudio Tennie
eslr.bsky.social
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www.eslrsociety.com
ctennie.bsky.social
Looks like "Krüger" to me
ctennie.bsky.social
Watched it a few years ago. Still recovering.
fakehistoryhunter.net
Of course there was also the delight of watching 'The Day After', just in case you had any hope for the future left.
But the holy grail of trauma collecting was watching 'Threads', for which I still need to gather courage to watch.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threads...
ctennie.bsky.social
Thank you. Did you mean: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Yes, agreed, all contemporary humans, everywhere, do things that require special explanations. MET-based explanations feature as intriguing contenders in all cases. I am sure Tim agrees with that.
As I said: I think it's all compatible.
Women’s subsistence networks scaffold cultural transmission among BaYaka foragers in the Congo Basin
The age structure of women’s subsistence networks shapes opportunities for social learning.
www.science.org
ctennie.bsky.social
You were not kidding when you said it's like doorstopper size, @jeremykendal.bsky.social :-)
The Oxford handbook of cultural evolution book
ctennie.bsky.social
You forgot about portable AI
ctennie.bsky.social
Exactly. In-ear-canal hearing devices exist already - so I guess its just a matter of time. Months, likely. They would only need to last a few minutes, so I guess its feasible, and doable - and so I guess they will come soon.
ctennie.bsky.social
I would not be suprised if tiny ear-pieces, connected to AI, already exist that listen in and can prompt answers.
Reposted by Claudio Tennie
katrinanavickas.bsky.social
Absolutely astounded that the UCU and Unison branches at Kent and Greenwich were not consulted, and that staff only found out about the merger this morning via BBC news and Kent Online. Solidarity to all colleagues.
Reposted by Claudio Tennie
duhe.bsky.social
Still waiting for your recommendations! In the meantime, given the need to understand healthcare news, I recommend following @trishgreenhalgh.bsky.social @wiringthebrain.bsky.social @carlbergstrom.com
duhe.bsky.social
I am going to implement this tip as a bsky starter pack! To help, all you need to do is to suggest bsky accounts of people who match this description and are useful bulwarks against misinformation. I will take the top 5-10 and make them into our ultimate starter pack security blanket.
These two tips are the most important. The last tip is a bonus recommendation. Find a few people, not too many, that you think you can more or less trust. Ideally, they should be smarter than you, more knowledgeable concerning some areas than you are, more emotionally stable and mature, and themselves have a network of people smarter and more knowledgeable than they are. Their primary source of income and social success should not be tied to you believing them. Cull the list mercilessly whenever you think you are being manipulated or when they are not on the level, but never remove someone from the list because you disagree with them (that goes against the whole point of trusting them!). Once you have this list of people you trust, instead of trying to decide what is true in each case, something we already concluded is a fool’s errand, blindly trust these people. Especially if they all agree about something. When you have the time, skills, inclination, and tranquility then, by all means, do the digging yourself. But assuming you have to earn a living, raise a family, have hobbies, and whatnot, you should not try to rationally decide what the evidence says about things you are not an expert on.
Reposted by Claudio Tennie
benpatrickwill.bsky.social
Journal publishers *are* bundling your papers up in "data licensing agreements" for big tech companies to use for AI model training. Our publisher, T&F, got £75m from Microsoft for that last year alone.
ctennie.bsky.social
It's truly down on the individual to make the internet function these days
ctennie.bsky.social
This is also why, whenever I eventually manage to get a recipe I like, I hold on to it for dear life (and so I save the actual recipe part in my phone's telephone book - as if it were a person)
mikemorrison.bsky.social
Which would you prefer?
1. ChatGPT
2. Google & The entire internet --- but without ads, spammy content, etc. Like recipe sites would just give you the recipe with photos.
Reposted by Claudio Tennie
botanistlaura.bsky.social
It's been a great week for weird biology: ants defying the species concept, fluorescing birds of paradise and now forehead teeth in ratfish
katewong.bsky.social
Behold the gloriously weird Spotted Ratfish. It has teeth on its forehead for sex. The teeth line a cartilaginous appendage called a tenaculum that in males can be erected and used to grasp a female during mating 🧪
karlycohen.bsky.social
New paper is officially out!
Ratfish have a second jaw on their foreheads - CT + histology show they’re real teeth, built from the same tissues and signals as oral teeth.

www.washington.edu/news/2025/09...
ctennie.bsky.social
Supraindividual know-how is (pretty much) everywhere.
abigaildesmond.bsky.social
Ursula K. LeGuin on technology
ctennie.bsky.social
Ah, for any linguist questions I would have to refer to the other authors. I am a few things maybe, but certainly not a linguist :-)
ctennie.bsky.social
I think a few years ago I would have reacted the same. Now, I am excited about these things - it's all part of a bigger enterprise. For me, for example, it'll link well w. a current project on the evolution of cultural complexity, with Magnus Enquist. But sure, I get that this is not for everyone.
ctennie.bsky.social
Seems like only people can add their name if they live in the states?
Reposted by Claudio Tennie
jeremykendal.bsky.social
Physical copies of this 71-chapter tome now exist. Do encourage your library to buy a copy…also doubles as excellent door stop! Co-edited with Jamie Tehrani and @rachkendal.bsky.social. @oxunipress.bsky.social @durhamanthropology.bsky.social
The Oxford Handbook of Cultural Evolution hard copy