Superstimuli are typically artificial. I don’t have this problem with Dennett’s explanation of the sweet tooth just because cake exists—the cake is explained. And I wouldn’t be complaining about the cuteness explanation if the only thing cuter than the baby were an idealized drawing of a baby.
I wouldn’t use “superstimulus” to describe a bunny being merely cuter than a baby, but I would for a cuckoo too big for the nest, yet still being fed by the host. This is the result of an optimization process, though not an artificial one.
It’s in cuckoo interests to be attractive to host birds; it’s not obviously serving non-domesticated animals to be cute. It hasn’t historically stopped us from eating them at anywhere near the rates that would put that kind of pressure on.
it’s not obviously serving non-domesticated animals to be cute. It hasn’t historically stopped us from eating them at anywhere near the rates that would put that kind of pressure on.
If so, then it also doesn’t significantly harm humans to see animals as cute (since it doesn’t make us give up a source of food). If this is so, then a much weaker justification might be accepted for the source of cuteness, perhaps as weak as “side effect of phenotypically unrelated evolution”.
Can’t find the citation now, but at least some of the reason that host birds feed baby cuckoos is that parent cuckoos monitor how well their offspring are doing and will destroy the nests of birds that fail to feed the cuckoo chick. So there’s selective pressure to respond to the cuckoo chick’s stimulus without it necessarily being a superstimulus.
I saw that hypothesis when I was looking for the picture, but it doesn’t apply to the particular picture, where the cuckoo is the only chick in the nest, in fact, too big for even the mother to perch on the rim. That was way beyond the pictures I’d seen before, where the cuckoo is merely bigger than the mother. Actually, the picture doesn’t make sense me: how can the mother provide enough food for this gigantic chick, much bigger than her whole brood?
That seems like pretty strong evidence for the superstimulus hypothesis. Do they also feed chicks of their own species in other nests? Is it just philanderers? otherwise, it sounds like pretty poor fitness.
Given 5000 species of mammals in the world that are guaranteed to have a number of facial features in common with humans and a number of developmental similarities, shouldn’t some happen to super-stimulate our cuteness sense just by chance?
This doesn’t rule out the baby hypothesis (although I don’t accept it as the best one, myself). The important thing is that we do consider babies somewhat cute. By the hypothesis, if babies weren’t cute at all (if everyone recognized how ugly they are), adults would care for them less. If true, this would be a beneficial instinct despite the attention wasted on cute animals.
Since evolutionary adaptations are selected from chance mutations to begin with, it’s not unreasonable for one to have mildly negative side effects. Can someone weigh in on how numerically probable it is that evolution hadn’t improved this instinct further, to only work on babies, if we assume it has existed for X millions of years? We need hard numbers...
I wonder if we don’t repress thinking that babies are cute to some extent. Before I had one, I never thought babies were cute. I just thought: eww, work! or, eww, delayed career plans! They represent responsibility, which isn’t cute. (Similar to contents of this thread.)
But if you were walking in a forest and just happened to find a baby. If you didn’t know it was a human baby, with various obligations and long-term ties, wouldn’t you want to pick it up and snuggle it? Or not?
I’ll also add here, though it could be added other places, that I don’t know if most parents think newborns are cute. (I actually have a theory that children are born a few weeks earlier than evolution long-term conditioned us for.) Children are maximally cute somewhere between 6 months and 3 years and each parent differs in exactly when and why.
But if you were walking in a forest and just happened to find a baby. If you didn’t know it was a human baby, with various obligations and long-term ties, wouldn’t you want to pick it up and snuggle it? Or not?
Unless the baby is likely to be a relative, isn’t this actually vastly less adaptive behavior than picking up a cute bunny rabbit that you can eat later in times of famine?
Unless the baby is likely to be a relative, isn’t this actually vastly less adaptive behavior than picking up a cute bunny rabbit that you can eat later in times of famine?
Now this is an explanation I can accept as at least remotely plausible without doing mental gymnastics!
I don’t have strong opinion if babies are above or below 0-cuteness level, it seems to vary from person to person—but they’re definitely below mammal average baby cuteness.
That looks like just the evo-psych kind of reasoning Alicorn is warning against.
Compare: given 5000 species of mammals that are guaranteed to have many physical features in common with humans, shouldn’t some happen to super-stimulate our sexual attraction just by chance? Why would mating choice be that much more strongly selected than baby nurturing behavior?
ETA: some good explanations for this difference have been proposed in the comments below:
Only mating choice is subject to sexual selection, which is a powerful force. (Eliezer)
Animals aren’t deliberately trying to appear cute. But other humans are always trying to appear sexy. Therefore our sexual choice heuristics evolved to better eliminate false positives. (Me)
Actually, it makes perfect sense for sexual selection on sexual-attractiveness-features to be subject to far greater selection pressure and fine-tuning than baby-cuteness.
I’ll make a testable prediction here: Cases of parental superstimulus (like baby ducks following a stick figure, infant monkeys getting attached to puppets, etc., if I’m remembering correctly) ought to be far more common / easier to fake than sexual superstimulus. I’ll limit the key part of the prediction to complex vertebrates so that they have large enough brains to be complicated, but I wouldn’t be surprised to find the rule more universal than that.
That’s my point. Jack’s theory, which rests entirely on the fact other animals look similar to human babies, does not explain why many animals are cute while not a single animal is (widely) sexually attractive.
Well, “catgirls” seem to have large appeal, but that’s easily explained away—they’re 99% human with 1% added kitten for massive cuteness signal in a way that doesn’t interfere with any human sexual signals. It’s a lot like 99% with 1% added flower in form of perfume being more sexually attractive than 100% natural human.
The cost of a mistake may be lower in the case of cuteness than sexiness.
Indeed, sexual arousal is comparatively difficult to trigger, even by members of the actual target group: most humans don’t find most humans of the opposite sex very attractive, while they may find most babies somewhat cute.
The cost of a mistake may be lower in the case of cuteness than sexiness.
“May” be. I don’t see this as being demonstrated. I prefer explanations like Eliezer’s that show greater selection pressure—there’s a whole range of explicit sexual selection, but no real selection on other species for cuteness.
Here’s another explanation: other species don’t benefit from being cute-to-humans, so they don’t spend their time trying to cheat humans into perceiving them as cute. But humans are deliberately trying to be sexually attractive and are very good at taking advantage of any weak points in our sexual heuristics. Therefore our heuristics evolved to eliminate false positives.
Most? You think there are more than 2500 species which adult humans would say are cuter than babies? That seems wildly implausible to me; I’d say no more than 300 or so are on par with babies, and fewer exceed it. That isn’t too much; surely you could list maybe not >300 species but a measly 150.
How about birds? >10,000 species there; you think there are >5,000 extremely cute birds?
I’d venture that there isn’t even a bare majority of cuteness at zoos—institutions would would select for cuteness.
Superstimuli are typically not found in the Environment of Evolutionary Adaptedness (or else the executions that latched on to them inappropriately would tend to decrease in frequency through the population). Although humans have spread to habitats outside Africa, the largest changes since then have been ones humans have made—i.e. “artificial”.
That is a reasonable explanation. (I don’t know why you were downvoted, and voted you back up to 0.)
But theoretically, it’s possible to have a superstimulus for cuteness that existed in our EEA, if the maladaptive behavior that would be triggered by it is more easily prevented by a cultural norm or another adaptation, instead of by tuning down our cuteness sense for it.
Oh, it’s absolutely possible—this I why couched the phrasing in terms of “typically” and “tend to”.
And, well, votes are noisy.
If I had to ascribe a reason, it would be definitional—superstimulus could be used to just mean “trigger the adaptation more than what the adaptation was for”, which need not imply any significant harm, or it could be used to mean “will trigger the adaptation to such a strong extent, that it does cause harm, either by inappropriate behavior to the stimulus, or disrupting appropriate behavior to the stimulus it was adapted for.”
I think the latter definition is more useful, though I admit that the examples I’ve tried to find for excluding based on it (finding patterns in randomness, finding faces in car grills) also didn’t trigger more than the usual stimulus, so would have been excluded from the first definition as well.
Superstimuli are typically artificial. I don’t have this problem with Dennett’s explanation of the sweet tooth just because cake exists—the cake is explained. And I wouldn’t be complaining about the cuteness explanation if the only thing cuter than the baby were an idealized drawing of a baby.
I wouldn’t use “superstimulus” to describe a bunny being merely cuter than a baby, but I would for a cuckoo too big for the nest, yet still being fed by the host. This is the result of an optimization process, though not an artificial one.
It’s in cuckoo interests to be attractive to host birds; it’s not obviously serving non-domesticated animals to be cute. It hasn’t historically stopped us from eating them at anywhere near the rates that would put that kind of pressure on.
How does the same cuckoo manage to be attractive to so many host birds?
If so, then it also doesn’t significantly harm humans to see animals as cute (since it doesn’t make us give up a source of food). If this is so, then a much weaker justification might be accepted for the source of cuteness, perhaps as weak as “side effect of phenotypically unrelated evolution”.
Can’t find the citation now, but at least some of the reason that host birds feed baby cuckoos is that parent cuckoos monitor how well their offspring are doing and will destroy the nests of birds that fail to feed the cuckoo chick. So there’s selective pressure to respond to the cuckoo chick’s stimulus without it necessarily being a superstimulus.
There isn’t strong evidence of this.
~Bird Dork.
Good to know. Wikipedia calls one particular paper “rather convincing”—is it on crack in this instance?
I saw that hypothesis when I was looking for the picture, but it doesn’t apply to the particular picture, where the cuckoo is the only chick in the nest, in fact, too big for even the mother to perch on the rim. That was way beyond the pictures I’d seen before, where the cuckoo is merely bigger than the mother. Actually, the picture doesn’t make sense me: how can the mother provide enough food for this gigantic chick, much bigger than her whole brood?
Maybe that’s not the mother. Some birds will feed cuckoos in nests not their own.
That’s pretty crazy! I’d like a cite.
That seems like pretty strong evidence for the superstimulus hypothesis. Do they also feed chicks of their own species in other nests? Is it just philanderers? otherwise, it sounds like pretty poor fitness.
I just recall reading it somewhere, sorry. It could easily be wrong. (I did find something talking about a goose feeding a bunch of fish, though.)
Given 5000 species of mammals in the world that are guaranteed to have a number of facial features in common with humans and a number of developmental similarities, shouldn’t some happen to super-stimulate our cuteness sense just by chance?
Lots of them superstimulate compared to human babies. It doesn’t seem very coincidental to me. There are even birds that are cuter than human babies.
This doesn’t rule out the baby hypothesis (although I don’t accept it as the best one, myself). The important thing is that we do consider babies somewhat cute. By the hypothesis, if babies weren’t cute at all (if everyone recognized how ugly they are), adults would care for them less. If true, this would be a beneficial instinct despite the attention wasted on cute animals.
Since evolutionary adaptations are selected from chance mutations to begin with, it’s not unreasonable for one to have mildly negative side effects. Can someone weigh in on how numerically probable it is that evolution hadn’t improved this instinct further, to only work on babies, if we assume it has existed for X millions of years? We need hard numbers...
I don’t find babies cute at all—the shitting crying obnoxious variety which really exists is strongly anti-cute.
On the other hand I haven’t met a single person yet who wouldn’t go awwwwww when interacting with my cat.
I wonder if we don’t repress thinking that babies are cute to some extent. Before I had one, I never thought babies were cute. I just thought: eww, work! or, eww, delayed career plans! They represent responsibility, which isn’t cute. (Similar to contents of this thread.)
But if you were walking in a forest and just happened to find a baby. If you didn’t know it was a human baby, with various obligations and long-term ties, wouldn’t you want to pick it up and snuggle it? Or not?
I’ll also add here, though it could be added other places, that I don’t know if most parents think newborns are cute. (I actually have a theory that children are born a few weeks earlier than evolution long-term conditioned us for.) Children are maximally cute somewhere between 6 months and 3 years and each parent differs in exactly when and why.
Unless the baby is likely to be a relative, isn’t this actually vastly less adaptive behavior than picking up a cute bunny rabbit that you can eat later in times of famine?
Now this is an explanation I can accept as at least remotely plausible without doing mental gymnastics!
Probably not.
I don’t have strong opinion if babies are above or below 0-cuteness level, it seems to vary from person to person—but they’re definitely below mammal average baby cuteness.
Personally I agree, but many people report that they find babies cute. It’s not universal.
That looks like just the evo-psych kind of reasoning Alicorn is warning against.
Compare: given 5000 species of mammals that are guaranteed to have many physical features in common with humans, shouldn’t some happen to super-stimulate our sexual attraction just by chance? Why would mating choice be that much more strongly selected than baby nurturing behavior?
ETA: some good explanations for this difference have been proposed in the comments below:
Only mating choice is subject to sexual selection, which is a powerful force. (Eliezer)
Animals aren’t deliberately trying to appear cute. But other humans are always trying to appear sexy. Therefore our sexual choice heuristics evolved to better eliminate false positives. (Me)
Actually, it makes perfect sense for sexual selection on sexual-attractiveness-features to be subject to far greater selection pressure and fine-tuning than baby-cuteness.
I’ll make a testable prediction here: Cases of parental superstimulus (like baby ducks following a stick figure, infant monkeys getting attached to puppets, etc., if I’m remembering correctly) ought to be far more common / easier to fake than sexual superstimulus. I’ll limit the key part of the prediction to complex vertebrates so that they have large enough brains to be complicated, but I wouldn’t be surprised to find the rule more universal than that.
It’s not 1 of 5000 species of mammals which is cuter than human babies—it seems like most of them are.
That’s my point. Jack’s theory, which rests entirely on the fact other animals look similar to human babies, does not explain why many animals are cute while not a single animal is (widely) sexually attractive.
Well, “catgirls” seem to have large appeal, but that’s easily explained away—they’re 99% human with 1% added kitten for massive cuteness signal in a way that doesn’t interfere with any human sexual signals. It’s a lot like 99% with 1% added flower in form of perfume being more sexually attractive than 100% natural human.
The cost of a mistake may be lower in the case of cuteness than sexiness.
Indeed, sexual arousal is comparatively difficult to trigger, even by members of the actual target group: most humans don’t find most humans of the opposite sex very attractive, while they may find most babies somewhat cute.
“May” be. I don’t see this as being demonstrated. I prefer explanations like Eliezer’s that show greater selection pressure—there’s a whole range of explicit sexual selection, but no real selection on other species for cuteness.
Here’s another explanation: other species don’t benefit from being cute-to-humans, so they don’t spend their time trying to cheat humans into perceiving them as cute. But humans are deliberately trying to be sexually attractive and are very good at taking advantage of any weak points in our sexual heuristics. Therefore our heuristics evolved to eliminate false positives.
Most? You think there are more than 2500 species which adult humans would say are cuter than babies? That seems wildly implausible to me; I’d say no more than 300 or so are on par with babies, and fewer exceed it. That isn’t too much; surely you could list maybe not >300 species but a measly 150.
How about birds? >10,000 species there; you think there are >5,000 extremely cute birds?
I’d venture that there isn’t even a bare majority of cuteness at zoos—institutions would would select for cuteness.
If I had a list of species-weighted random pictures of mammals, I would take the bet that random mammal baby is cuter than human baby.
Where do you get this—“Superstimuli are typically artificial”?
Superstimuli are typically not found in the Environment of Evolutionary Adaptedness (or else the executions that latched on to them inappropriately would tend to decrease in frequency through the population). Although humans have spread to habitats outside Africa, the largest changes since then have been ones humans have made—i.e. “artificial”.
That is a reasonable explanation. (I don’t know why you were downvoted, and voted you back up to 0.)
But theoretically, it’s possible to have a superstimulus for cuteness that existed in our EEA, if the maladaptive behavior that would be triggered by it is more easily prevented by a cultural norm or another adaptation, instead of by tuning down our cuteness sense for it.
Oh, it’s absolutely possible—this I why couched the phrasing in terms of “typically” and “tend to”.
And, well, votes are noisy.
If I had to ascribe a reason, it would be definitional—superstimulus could be used to just mean “trigger the adaptation more than what the adaptation was for”, which need not imply any significant harm, or it could be used to mean “will trigger the adaptation to such a strong extent, that it does cause harm, either by inappropriate behavior to the stimulus, or disrupting appropriate behavior to the stimulus it was adapted for.”
I think the latter definition is more useful, though I admit that the examples I’ve tried to find for excluding based on it (finding patterns in randomness, finding faces in car grills) also didn’t trigger more than the usual stimulus, so would have been excluded from the first definition as well.
Seconded. Why should this be the case?
As a counterexample, some people find rabbits cuter than babies.
Were you begging the question for humor’s sake?
Yes, and of all the places not to get that...
It wasn’t funny.
The editing (choice of