Litcius/Paper detail

Modifiable reporting unit problems and time series of long-term human activity

Andrew Bevan, Enrico R. Crema

2020Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper responds to a resurgence of interest in constructing long-term time proxies of human activity, especially but not limited to models of population change over the Pleistocene and/or Holocene. While very much agreeing with the need for this increased attention, we emphasize three important issues that can all be thought of as modifiable reporting unit problems: the impact of (i) archaeological periodization, (ii) uneven event durations and (iii) geographical nucleation-dispersal phenomena. Drawing inspiration from real-world examples from prehistoric Britain, Greece and Japan, we explore their consequences and possible mitigation via a reproducible set of tactical simulations. This article is part of the theme issue 'Cross-disciplinary approaches to prehistoric demography'.

Topics & Concepts

PrehistoryTerm (time)PopulationPeriodizationUnit (ring theory)PleistoceneHistorySet (abstract data type)GeographyBiological dispersalEconomic geographyDemographyArchaeologyComputer scienceSociologyPsychologyMathematics educationProgramming languageQuantum mechanicsPhysicsArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesPleistocene-Era Hominins and ArchaeologyPacific and Southeast Asian Studies