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References
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[1]
Diffusionism and Acculturation - AnthropologyDiffusionism is the spread of culture traits from one society to another, as humans are conservative and lack inventiveness.Missing: peer- | Show results with:peer-
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[2]
Diffusionist and Culture-Area Theories (Chapter 4)Dec 9, 2021 · Diffusionism stresses the transmission of things (material or otherwise) from one culture to another, one people to another, or one place to another.
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[3]
Domains of Diffusion: How Culture and Institutions Travel around the ...The theory views the world as polycentric, divided into bounded domains of connectivity where diffusion occurs, with varying degrees of institutionalization.Four Contemporary... · Domains: Definition, Origins... · Diffusion Mechanisms and...
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[4]
Focus Applying event history analysis to explain the diffusion of ...Within archaeology, innovation diffusion is considered to be one of the basic mechanisms of cultural transmission as it describes the way novel traits or ...
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[5]
Cultural diffusion dynamics depend on behavioural production rulesAug 10, 2022 · We present a generative model that integrates the two, and ask how variation in production rules might influence diffusion dynamics.Introduction · Methods · Results · Discussion<|separator|>
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[6]
The Silk Road: Connecting People and CulturesArchaeologists had begun to find links between widely dispersed civilizations of Egypt, the Mediterranean, Mesopotamia, Iran, India, and Central Asia. Cultural ...
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[7]
5.5 Cultural Diffusion – Introduction to Cultural GeographyExamples include language, religion, race and ethnicity, and a history of conflict between specific cultural communities. Islam, for instance, nowadays acts as ...
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[8]
Macro-evolutionary studies of cultural diversity: a review of empirical ...A growing body of theoretical and empirical research has examined cultural transmission and adaptive cultural behaviour at the individual, within-group level.
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[9]
Diffusion in Sociology: Definition, Theory, Examples - ThoughtCoOct 5, 2019 · Diffusion, also known as cultural diffusion, is a social process through which elements of culture spread from one society or social group to another.
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[10]
Culture Change: Glossary of TermsSep 10, 2009 · ... assimilation occurs. It is also often hastened by intermarriage and by de-emphasizing cultural and or biological differences. ... acculturation ...
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[11]
Cultural Evolution - Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyDec 23, 2007 · A contrasting approach aims at distinguishing cultural inheritance and transmission by focusing on a distinctive channel by which information ...
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[12]
History of Herodotus - The Internet Classics ArchiveThe Egyptians were also the first to introduce solemn assemblies, processions, and litanies to the gods; of all which the Greeks were taught the use by them. It ...Missing: influence | Show results with:influence
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[13]
[PDF] EGYPTIAN INFLUENCE ON THE GREEKS THROUGH MYTHOLOGYJun 3, 2020 · In book II of The Histories, Herodotus writes about Egypt and the different stories that came from the civilization that were related to war ...
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[14]
[PDF] Ibn Khaldun's Concept of Social Change: A Sociological PurviewThe diffusion of culture within society and from one society to another has been a great source of cultural and social change in every society. Roughly ...
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[15]
Exploring the Concept of Social Change in the Thought of Ibn KhaldunSep 22, 2020 · ... Khaldun views social progress as a cyclical process in classifying the evolution of cultures. This is similar with the transition from a ...
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[16]
[PDF] Exploring the Concept of Social Change in the Thought of Ibn KhaldunThe foregoing could be regarded as a hindrance to cultural diffusion that stimulate development in human society. Since the culture itself is dynamic, the ...
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[17]
[PDF] Herodotus and The Histories: Accounts of Intercivilizational ContactSep 16, 2021 · Herodotus, a “Master of Truth,” according to Marcel Detienne's expression, is the one who preserves the memory of the actions of men, ...
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[18]
Can Humanity be Mapped? Adolf Bastian, Friedrich Ratzel and the ...Dec 6, 2018 · The two main vectors through which Ratzel organized the mass of human cultural materials were indeed the most general, already adopted by Kant ...
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[19]
German-Austrian Diffusionism: Mapping Cultural CirclesNov 12, 2023 · Unlike other theories that argued for a single, central point of cultural origin, Ratzel proposed the idea of kulturkreis, or cultural circles.
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[20]
The Australian who rewrote world history - Inside StoryAug 10, 2015 · Scientist Grafton Elliot Smith promoted the theory that ancient Egypt was the source of almost every major innovation.
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[21]
Spread of Ideas: The Legacy of Diffusionism School - ResearchGateThe notion of "culture circles," first proposed by German diffusionism, led by figures like Wilhelm Schmidt and Robert Fritz Craebner, posited that the cultural ...
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[22]
The Diffusion of Cultural Traits - Franz Boas - jstorFranz Boas. The Diffusion of Cultural. Traits. Originally published in Social Research: An International Quarterly of Political and Social Science, volume 4 ...
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[23]
2.7: Culture Change - Social Sci LibreTextsJul 22, 2021 · Finally, forced diffusion is what it sounds like. A dominant cultural group imposes its beliefs and values on another subjugated group, such as ...
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[24]
Diffusion - (Intro to Cultural Anthropology) - FiveableDiffusion is the process by which cultural beliefs, practices, and technologies spread from one society or cultural group to another.Missing: core principles
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[25]
The Dynamics of Cultural Change: Diffusion, Acculturation, and ...Dec 4, 2023 · Diffusion: How cultural traits spread across societies · Acculturation: The exchange through direct contact · Assimilation: Adopting the ...
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[26]
Examples of Cultural Diffusion in History - AithorJun 17, 2024 · These two examples of cultural diffusion, the Silk Road and the Columbian Exchange, are important historical events in the spread of cultural ...Introduction · Definition of Cultural Diffusion · Ancient Civilizations · The Silk Road
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[27]
Forced Cultural Diffusion - (AP Human Geography) - FiveableForced cultural diffusion occurs when one culture imposes its beliefs, practices, or traits onto another culture, often through coercion or power dynamics.
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[28]
15 Cultural Diffusion Examples (Human Geography) (2025)Nov 9, 2022 · Cultural diffusion refers to the spread of cultures around the world. It can happen through migration, media, trade, colonialism, and similar practices.
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[29]
[PDF] Examples of Cultural Diffusion - RED 6● An example of forced diffusion would be taking Africans from their home to become slaves. ● An example of cultural diffusion with negative effects would be ...Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
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[30]
[PDF] Stimulus Diffusion - eScholarshipAnother historic example is furnished by the invention of the so called alphabet, really a syllabary, for the Cherokee language by Sequoya, or John Gist or ...
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[31]
[PDF] AUTHOR Wagner, Elaine The Vision of Sequoyah: A ... - ERICHis use of the concept and its application to the Cherokee language is an example of idea or stimulus diffusion, the adoption or adaptation of an idea which is ...
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[32]
The 6 Types of Cultural Diffusion (AP Human Geography) (2025)Indirect diffusion takes place when a culture is shared by a 'middleman' who spreads it from one place to another. An example of this is if you were to start ...
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[33]
5.2: Background - The Diffusion of Culture - Social Sci LibreTextsAug 6, 2024 · The other major type of cultural diffusion is hierarchical diffusion, whereby cultural elements diffuse from larger populations to smaller ...
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[PDF] International Journal of Geography and Geography Education (IGGE)Popular culture is generally diffused hierarchically, for example spread of. Cricket within American elites is a hierarchical diffusion, as it occurs only in ...
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[35]
Urban hierarchy and spatial diffusion over the innovation life cycleThe mixture of hierarchical and neighbourhood diffusion mechanisms are thought to resemble routing behaviour in social media [11] such that spreading initially ...
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[36]
[PDF] Migration and Cultural Change - American Economic AssociationWe propose a novel perspective on migration and cultural change by asking both theoretically and empirically whether migration is a source of cultural ...
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[37]
[PDF] International Migration and Cultural ConvergenceThe empirical analysis confirms the main predictions of our model. For over six thousand country pairs, cultural diffusion dominates between 1970 and 2010: we ...
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[38]
Trade and Geography in the Spread of Islam - PMC - PubMed CentralThe spread of Islam was hence greatly enhanced by social contact as a consequence of trade (Miller, 1969; Wood, 2003).
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[39]
The Silk Road - National Geographic EducationDec 5, 2024 · For more than 1500 years, the network of routes known as the Silk Road contributed to the exchange of goods and ideas among diverse cultures.
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[40]
Silk Road - Facts, History & LocationNov 3, 2017 · 220 Han Emperor Wu sent imperial envoy Zhang Qian to make contact with cultures in Central Asia in 138 B.C., and his reports from his journeys ...
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[41]
Silk Road Opens | Research Starters - EBSCOThe commodity for which the Silk Road was named was first produced in China about 3,000 b.c.e. By the first century b.c.e., it became known to the Romans, who ...Silk Road Opens · Summary Of Event · Significance
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About the Silk Roads - UNESCOTravellers along the Silk Roads were attracted not only by trade but also by the intellectual and cultural exchange taking place in cities along the Silk Roads, ...
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[43]
A massive migration from the steppe brought Indo European ...Mar 2, 2015 · At least some of the Indo-European languages spoken in Europe were likely introduced by a massive migration from the Russian steppe.
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[44]
Ancient-DNA Study Identifies Originators of Indo-European ...Feb 5, 2025 · A pair of landmark studies has genetically identified the originators of the massive Indo-European family of 400-plus languages.
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[45]
Mapping the origins and expansion of the Indo-European language ...This landscape-based model allows for the inclusion of a more complex diffusion process in which rates of migration are a function of geography. We examined ...
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[46]
The Spread of Islam in West Africa: Containment, Mixing, and ...Trade between West Africa and the Mediterranean predated Islam, however, North African Muslims intensified the Trans-Saharan trade. North African traders were ...
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[47]
How Far Did Ancient Rome Spread? - History.comAug 12, 2019 · Over the next two-and-a-half centuries, Rome spread throughout the Italian Peninsula by conquering territories and either making them ...
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[48]
The Roman Empire: A Brief History | Milwaukee Public MuseumFrom its founding in 625 BC to its fall in AD 476, the Roman Empire conquered and integrated dozens of cultures. The influence of these cultures can be seen ...
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[49]
[PDF] Cultural Imperialism in the Roman Empire - eGroveOct 2, 2024 · The Roman Empire is often credited with being highly culturally influential both in its time and in later cultural contexts.
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[50]
[PDF] Historical and Contemporary Processes of Diffusion - PostsThe major globalized languages of the world—English, French, Spanish, and Arabic—spread from their hearths largely because of conquest and colonialism.
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Historical Causes of Diffusion | College Board AP® Human ...Jan 10, 2025 · European colonization of the Americas led to the diffusion of Christianity (Catholicism and Protestantism) · European languages (English, Spanish ...Missing: mechanisms | Show results with:mechanisms
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Historical Causes of Cultural Diffusion - AP HuG Study Guide3.5 Historical Causes of Cultural Diffusion · Colonialism · Trade · War and Conquest · Technology and Communication Advancements · Environmental and Ecological ...
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[53]
(PDF) The Power Dynamics in Language and Culture - ResearchGateDec 27, 2024 · This article explores the mechanisms through which language and culture reflect and reinforce power hierarchies.
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[54]
[PDF] Cultural Transmission and the Diffusion of InnovationsA great deal of empirical work has been done on the characteristics of "innovators" and "early adopters"— those who adopt early in diffusional processes ( ...
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[55]
Cultural Diffusion in Sociology: Definition & ExamplesFeb 13, 2024 · Cultural diffusion is the process by which knowledge, innovation, language, or cultural characteristics are spread within or between cultures or communities.Missing: anthropology | Show results with:anthropology
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[PDF] THE IMPACT OF THE PRINTING PRESS∗ The movable type ...Historical research suggests that print media transformed the ways ideas were disseminated, promoted the accumulation of human capital, and played a key role in.
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7 Ways the Printing Press Changed the World - History.comAug 28, 2019 · The printing press enabled faster, wider knowledge sharing, mass-produced books, and accelerated the Renaissance and scientific progress.
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[58]
7.4 Radio's Impact on Culture | Media and Culture - Lumen LearningSince its inception, radio's impact on American culture has been immense. Modern popular culture is unthinkable without the early influence of radio.
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[PDF] Television's Influence on Cultures - Scholar CommonsJul 11, 2025 · It is widely assumed by the public, broadcasters and some communication researchers that television has caused major shifts in contemporary ...
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The impact of technological advancement on culture and society - NIHDec 30, 2024 · The global diffusion of technology often leads to cultural homogenization, threatening local traditions and practices. The spread of digital ...
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[61]
The impact of technological advancement on culture and societyDec 30, 2024 · For example, the rapid spread of the internet and mobile technologies has facilitated cross-cultural interactions, leading to the blending of ...
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[62]
(PDF) TikTok and Cultural Diffusion: A Study of the Platform's Impact ...Aug 9, 2025 · With its unique blend of entertainment and user-generated content, TikTok serves as a powerful catalyst for cultural diffusion. As users create, ...
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[63]
A Cultural Evolution Approach to Digital Media - PubMed Central - NIHDigital media have today an enormous diffusion, and their influence on the behavior of a vast part of the human population can hardly be underestimated.
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[64]
Digital Cultural Diffusion: How Digital Technologies Shape ...Nov 21, 2024 · In fact, digital media can be seen to serve as a cultural gateway; connecting diverse groups of people, disseminating cultural information, and ...
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[65]
Diffusionism - Anthropology - iResearchNetSome diffusionists were determined to prove that all human culture originated in one place and then spread through diffusion, such as Englishmen G. Elliot Smith ...
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Sir Grafton Elliot Smith. 1871-1937 - jstorGRAFTON ELLIOT SMITH was born in the country town of Grafton, New. South ... disagree with Elliot Smith's extreme "diffusionist" ideas might be willing.
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[67]
Thoughts in Circles: Kulturkreislehre as a Hidden Paradigm in Past ...(1884, after Leser 1963, 20). One of Ratzel's pupils, L. Frobenius (1873–1938), introduced the term. Kulturkreis in ethnology in 1898. Frobenius saw culture ...
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[68]
[PDF] THE SCHOOL OF AMERICAN DIFFUSIONISM WITH A ...From those American diffusionists who were interested in Boas's approach, Clark Wissler was the one. Clark Wissler was an American anthropologist at the ...
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[PDF] Boas, Kroeber, Lowie: American Anthropology Comes of AgeMar 19, 2013 · Boas tested serious hypotheses about diffusion and independent invention, about race, and about the peopling of the Americas. These three lines ...Missing: peer | Show results with:peer
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[70]
The Origins of Agriculture: New Data, New Ideas : An Introduction to ...Agriculture developed independently in at least 10 places, with the earliest evidence from Southwest Asia. New data pushes back domestication time.
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[71]
The Origins of Agriculture as a Natural Experiment in Cultural ...Archaeologists are convinced that the seven centers of domestication are indeed independent on several grounds. First, the domesticates taken up in each center ...
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[72]
Prehistoric Plant Exploitation and Domestication: An Inspiration for ...Jun 14, 2023 · Prehistorical transitions to farming occurred independently in different centers around the globe, where different plant and animal species ...
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[73]
Did the bow and arrow develop independently in the various ...Nov 3, 2012 · ... diffusion of course happened) and we recognize that independent inventions can occur and sometimes lead to things that are surprisingly similar.
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[74]
Cultural evolutionary theory: How culture evolves and why it mattersJul 24, 2017 · Furthermore, cultural and genetic evolution can interact with one another and influence both transmission and selection. This interaction ...<|separator|>
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[75]
[PDF] Why societies vary in their rates of innovationThe first part presents a very simple formal model that allows us to explore the relative contributions of independent invention, cultural learning, and the ...
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[76]
Evolution and Diffusion - Cambridge University Press & AssessmentEvolutionism assumes independent development based on uniform human needs, while diffusionism suggests borrowing or common origin of cultural similarities.
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[77]
Cultural evolution: Where we have been and where we are going ...Nov 18, 2024 · Culture has no independent causal role. Behavioral ecologists believed that these mechanisms could be ignored because however they worked, they ...
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[78]
Diffusion And Independent Invention: A Critique Of Logic 1Aug 6, 2025 · These criticisms stemmed from the insufficient explanatory capacity of diffusionist approaches, particularly in light of concepts such as ...
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[79]
[PDF] Measuring Cultural Relatedness Using Multiple Seriation Ordering ...Mar 17, 2016 · Abstract Seriation is a long-standing archaeological method for relative dating that has proven effective in probing regional-scale patterns ...
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[80]
Seriation Method and Its Evaluation - jstorHere seriation as an archaeological method for inferring relative chronology is reviewed in terms of its assumptions and the conditions under which it is ...
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[81]
Trade and Exchange in Archaeology | Intro to ... - FiveableProvenance studies analyze the chemical composition of artifacts to determine their origin and trace their movement through trade. Techniques include X-ray ...
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The transmission of pottery technology among prehistoric European ...Dec 22, 2022 · Synthesis between demic and cultural diffusion in the Neolithic transition in Europe. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 109, 18669–18673 (2012) ...
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[83]
A tale of two technologies: Prehistoric diffusion of pottery innovations ...Anthropologists, especially archaeologists, have long made variation in technology a major focus of research. ... Cultural diffusion in humans and other animals.
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[84]
Genetic evidence supports demic diffusion of Han culture - PubMedSep 16, 2004 · The pattern of the southward expansion of Han culture is consistent with the demic diffusion model, and that males played a larger role than females in this ...
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[85]
Assessing the importance of cultural diffusion in the Bantu spread ...May 8, 2019 · We find that both spreads were driven by demic diffusion, in agreement with most archaeological, linguistic and genetic results. Nonetheless, ...<|separator|>
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[86]
5 - Populations in Contact: Linguistic, Archaeological, and Genomic ...This paper synthesizes evidence for the origin and spread of the Indo-European languages from three disciplines – genomic research, archaeology, and, ...
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[87]
Measuring the diffusion of linguistic change - PMC - NIHWe examine situations in which linguistic changes have probably been propagated via normal contact as opposed to via conquest, recent settlement and ...4. A Dialectometric View Of... · (a). Séguy's Law · 5. Individual Versus...Missing: evidence | Show results with:evidence
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Admixture, migrations, and dispersals in Central Asia - NatureFeb 11, 2004 · Physical anthropology has roughly defined Central Asian populations as presenting an admixture of eastern and western anthropometric traits.
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[89]
Genetic drift and anthropometric variation in Ireland - PubMedThese results show the influence of genetic drift, local migration, and admixture on Irish population structure. MeSH terms. Adolescent; Adult; Aged ...
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[90]
Reconciling migration models to the Americas with the variation of ...In this study we evaluated migration models to the Americas by using the information contained in native mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomes) from North America.
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[91]
Anthropometric data and population history - ResearchGateThese results show the influence of genetic drift, local migration, and admixture on Irish population structure. A major goal in anthropological genetics is ...
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[92]
Middle Pleistocene fire use: The first signal of widespread cultural ...Jul 23, 2021 · A striking characteristic of the fire signal that emerges from the archaeological record is the strong increase in evidence for fire use across ...
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[93]
Tracing the Origin and Spread of Agriculture in Europe | PLOS BiologyThe average rate of the Neolithic spread over Europe is 0.6–1.3 km/y (95% confidence interval). This is consistent with the prediction of demic diffusion (0.6– ...
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[94]
Synthesis between demic and cultural diffusion in the Neolithic ...We show that cultural diffusion explains ∼40% of the spread rate of the Neolithic transition in Europe, as implied by archaeological data.
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[95]
Demic and cultural diffusion propagated the Neolithic transition ...There are two main models of the Neolithic transition in Europe. The demic diffusion model assumes that farming spread due to the migration of farmers into ...
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[96]
The Emergence and Transmission of Metallurgical Technology for ...Apr 22, 2021 · The introduction and spread of bronze metallurgy is an essential component of the Bronze Age and life therein. It has attracted scholarly ...
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[97]
[PDF] From Metallurgy to Bronze Age Civilizations: The Synthetic TheoryAlso on continental Europe, furnace metallurgy was diffusing concurrently with the spread of the Bell Beaker culture.84 Beyond their patterns of migration ...
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[98]
Cross-cultural Transfer of Medical Knowledge in the Medieval ... - NIHThe field of science, e.g., astronomy and medicine, provides prominent examples of medieval cross-cultural transfers.
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[99]
Diffusion, Comparison and Periodization in Premodern World HistoryMany societies are now more than ever eager to re-write their ancient, classical, and medieval eras to serve present cultural and political needs. The ...
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[100]
Gunpowder in Medieval China – Science Technology and Society a ...The diffusion of gunpowder technology fueled an arms race in late medieval Europe and ushered in the era of early modern warfare. Ironically, even as these ...
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[101]
Gunpowder: Origins in the East - Brown UniversityIt is documented that the technology had reached the Middle East by the 13th century CE, at which point traders as well as crusaders would have come into ...
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[102]
Cross-Cultural Trade and Cultural Exchange During the CrusadesThe Crusades did not mark the beginning of trade between Muslim and Christian lands in Europe. Italian merchants traded across the Mediterranean with ...
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[PDF] The Effects of the CrusadesNaturally, increased trade led to increased cultural diffusion. Crusaders and traders learned about Arab art, architecture, medicine, and mathematics.
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[104]
[PDF] The Columbian Exchange: A History of Disease, Food, and IdeasThe Columbian Exchange was the exchange of diseases, ideas, food, crops, and populations between the New and Old Worlds after 1492.
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[105]
Columbian Exchange (1492-1800)The Columbian Exchange was the transfer of biota between the Old and New Worlds, impacting plants, animals, foods, and human populations globally.
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[106]
The Movement of Peoples and Diffusion of Cultures (Chapter 4)The roots of modern migration patterns, and ultimately cultural diffusion in the twenty-first century, extend back to the substantial movements of peoples ...Missing: thinkers | Show results with:thinkers
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[PDF] chapter two: - the global context: Asia, europe, and Africa in the early ...Northern and eastern Africa had been linked to the wider world through trade networks such as the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean, as well as through the spread ...
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[108]
The Diffusion of Books and Ideas in Colonial Peru: A Study of ...May 1, 1993 · This essay attempts to make a contribution to the history of mentalités in colonial Peru by analyzing 24 private book collections from the sixteenth and ...
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[109]
Spanish Colonial Culture - Castillo de San Marcos National ...Apr 20, 2022 · The culture that emerged in the colony of La Florida was a blend of Spanish, local Native, and African customs.
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Hyperdiffusionism: The Contours of a Pseudoarchaeological ...Feb 11, 2024 · Grafton Elliot Smith, one of the most vocal advocates of this theory, attributed a wide array of cultural phenomena, from megalithic ...
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[111]
Hyper-diffusion in ArchaeologyDec 8, 2016 · Early 20th century diffusionists like Grafton Elliot Smith thought that all culture originated from Egypt and that the Maya, for instance ...
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[112]
Diffusionism in Archaeological Theory: The Good, The Bad, and The ...This chapter details the use and abuse of a Cultural Historical approach and the concepts of diffusion in the prehistory of the Americas and the Pacific.
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[113]
Victorian Pseudoscience on a Netflix Budget: “Ancient Apocalypse ...Nov 21, 2022 · Hyperdiffusionism is a pseudo-archaeological hypothesis suggesting that certain historical technologies or ideas originated with a single people ...
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The SAA Archaeological Record May 2023, Volume 23 Number 3May 24, 2023 · Here, we describe some of the challenges of pseudoarchaeology and offer additional suggestions about how to face them. Prefacing a set of ...
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[115]
(PDF) Ancient near Eastern History from eurocentrism to an Open ...PDF | On Jan 1, 1999, Mario Liverani published Ancient near Eastern History from eurocentrism to an Open World | Find, read and cite all the research you ...
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Diffusionism: A Uniformitarian Critique - jstorThis paper examines the structure of diffusionism, puts forward a nondiffusionist alternative structure, and employs the alternative to modify diffusion-of-in-.<|control11|><|separator|>
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[PDF] J. M. Blaut - analepsisTo be precise, Eurocentrism includes a set of beliefs that are statements about empirical reality, statements educated and usually unprejudiced Europe ans ...
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[118]
Demic and cultural diffusion propagated the Neolithic transition ...May 6, 2015 · The Neolithic transition began to spread from the Near East into Europe, until it reached Northern Europe about 5500 years ago.Missing: Eurocentrism | Show results with:Eurocentrism<|control11|><|separator|>
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Eurocentrism, Afrocentrism and the need to decolonize African history.Sep 26, 2021 · Eurocentrism, Afrocentrism and the need to decolonize African history. ... Diffusionism theories was the underlying prejudice against non ...
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Sage Reference - Encyclopedia of Geography - Diffusion[Page 746]. Eurocentric and other-Centric Diffusionism. Epidemic or extreme diffusionism has been accused of Eurocentrism. Such diffusionism ...
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(PDF) Globalization and Cultural Homogenization - ResearchGateJul 18, 2025 · This paper examines the complex interplay between globalization and cultural homogenization, highlighting the historical, economic, political, ...
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[122]
Globalization and indigenous cultures: Homogenization or ...Thus, contrary to what Levitt predicted, there is much evidence that economic development driven by globalization is not going to homogenize cultures, though ...
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Homogenization or Diversification? The Impact of Globalization on ...The study also rejected that the world has become more homogenized, but rather that globalization has opened the doors to the enhancement of cultures.
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[124]
[PDF] World Trade Report 2024 - Trade and inclusivenessThe 2024 World Trade Report explores the complex interlinkages between trade and inclusiveness across and within economies, and discusses how trade policies ...
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Full article: Trade and culture: the ongoing debateJul 30, 2019 · The WTO spawned two key developments for trade and culture. First, it brought into being a powerful dispute settlement body.Abstract · Additional Information · Notes On ContributorsMissing: exchange | Show results with:exchange
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Free Trade and Cultural Policies: Evidence from Three US ...Through preferential free trade agreements (FTAs), the United States seeks to secure concessions in sectors, such as cultural and audiovisual services, from ...Missing: impact | Show results with:impact<|separator|>
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Globalization: An Overview of Its Main Characteristics and Types ...An economic benefit of cultural globalization for nations is the expansion of the tourism industry. Cultural diffusion is shaped by national identity and ...
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Cultural Diffusion Examples - TuritoMay 17, 2024 · Examples of expanded diffusion include the Kiki challenge, the spread of Roman culture, the usage of phones and the wide acceptance of books ...Missing: anthropology | Show results with:anthropology
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The Interaction of Globalization and Culture in the Modern WorldIt covers the most important processes of social and economic development in the world, helping to accelerate economic growth and modernization, cultural ...
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Key facts about recent trends in global migrationDec 16, 2022 · The number of international migrants grew to 281 million in 2020; 3.6% of the world's people lived outside their country of birth that year.
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International migrant stocks - Migration Data PortalFeb 12, 2025 · According to the UN, the estimated number of international migrants was 304 million in 2024. This figure is up from 275 million in 2020.
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[PDF] WORLD MIGRATION REPORT 2020 - IOM PublicationsThe World Migration Report 2020 project commenced in May 2018 and culminated in the launch of the report in November 2019 by the Director General at the 110th ...
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[PDF] The Impact Of Globalization On Local CultureJun 1, 2024 · Globalization brings a number of positive impacts to local cultures, including wider access to global information and knowledge, opportunities ...
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Globalization and the dynamics of cultural identity - ScienceDirect.comThis paper presents a simple model where micro-founded dynamics of cultural identity are endogenous and interact with an international trade equilibrium.Missing: diffusion scholarly
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Understanding Cross-Cultural Differences in Conceptualizing ...Jun 7, 2022 · This research proposes a scientific approach to investigate how cross-cultural differences contribute to the conceptualization of international trade patterns ...
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The fundamentals of cultural adaptation: implications for human ...Aug 31, 2020 · Here we suggest that beneficial cultural traits act in two ways to help human populations survive drastic environmental shifts. First, the ...
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The human life history is adapted to exploit the adaptive advantages ...Jun 1, 2020 · Humans evolved from an ape ancestor that was highly intelligent, moderately social and moderately dependent on cultural adaptations for subsistence technology.
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The cultural niche: Why social learning is essential for human ...We owe our success to our uniquely developed ability to learn from others. This capacity enables humans to gradually accumulate information across generations.<|separator|>
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Evidence of traditional knowledge loss among a contemporary ... - NIHHere we estimate changes in cultural traits associated to the traditional knowledge of wild plant uses among an Amazonian indigenous society.
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The negative cultural impact of tourism and its implication on ...The findings indicate that tourism has contributed to the commoditization of the culture of society, the erosion of the local communities' socio-cultural ...<|separator|>
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cultural diffusion theory and tourism implications - ResearchGateCultural diffusion is defined as the spread of cultural elements due to the interaction among people from different cultures. Migration was one major reason ...Missing: peer- | Show results with:peer-
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Cultural assimilation, cultural diffusion and the origin of the wealth of ...Sep 13, 2007 · For example, the collapse of the powerful Han dynasty ushered in nearly four centuries of cultural instability and fragmentation marred by civil ...
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Migration, cultural bereavement and cultural identity - PMC - NIHCultural changes in identity can be stressful and result in problems with self-esteem and mental health. Contact between the immigrant, or minority, community ...
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[149]
Identity and Conflict: Ties that Bind and Differences that DivideWe examine empirically the relationship between cultural similarities and differences and international dispute behavior in the post-World War II era.
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(PDF) Identity and Conflict: Ties That Bind and Differences That DivideAug 10, 2025 · We examine empirically the relationship between cultural similarities and differences and international dispute behavior in the post-World War II era.
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The study of the effects of digital media applications in cross-cultural ...This study investigates how digital media usage impacts cultural identity construction across diverse cultural contexts, focusing on the mediating roles of ...