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W.E.I.R.D.-ly.
"Even the highly cited examples of 150-people networks have been criticised as overwhelmingly skewed towards rich, educated, and industrialised societies, with non-western cultures rarely mentioned. Confirmation bias may well be a factor in the popularity and acceptance of Dunbar’s number."
https://oxsci.org/end-of-dunbars-number/
#sociology #psychology #anthropology #ecology #PopularScience #SocialNeworks #correlation #nuance #context #friendship #PopCulture #WEIRD
W.E.I.R.D.-ly.
"Even the highly cited examples of 150-people networks have been criticised as overwhelmingly skewed towards rich, educated, and industrialised societies, with non-western cultures rarely mentioned. Confirmation bias may well be a factor in the popularity and acceptance of Dunbar’s number."
https://oxsci.org/end-of-dunbars-number/
#sociology #psychology #anthropology #ecology #PopularScience #SocialNeworks #correlation #nuance #context #friendship #PopCulture #WEIRD
The end of Dunbar’s number: Have our social networks changed for good? - The Oxford Scientist
Helen Collins explores evidence for and against Dunbar's number, the idea that our species' social groups are limited to around 150 people.Helen Collins (The Oxford Scientist)