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| Format: | Recurso digital |
| Language: | English |
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2025
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16891744 |
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| _version_ | 1866902186357686272 |
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| author | Saarinen, Joonas |
| author_facet | Saarinen, Joonas |
| contents | <p>This paper presents the first rigorous quantitative framework demonstrating that Upper Paleolithic symbolic patterns represent organized information networks rather than isolated cultural development. Using statistical methods from population genetics, acoustics, information theory, and network science, we show that three independent archaeological patterns are statistically incompatible with random processes (p < 10^-200).</p> <p>Key findings:<br>- Wright-Fisher population genetics models prove that maintaining 32 standardized geometric signs across 30,000 years requires active curation, not random drift<br>- Chi-square analysis reveals systematic correlation between cave art placement and acoustic resonance properties (χ² > 1000, p < 0.001) <br>- Sign frequency distributions follow Zipf's Law (γ = -1.02), the statistical signature of natural communication systems<br>- Portable artifact networks exhibit scale-free topology characteristic of organized information exchange<br>- Bayesian model comparison provides decisive evidence (Bayes Factor > 10^100) for the information network hypothesis</p> <p>We introduce the Network Coherence Index (NCI), a novel composite metric for detecting prehistoric information systems. Paleolithic patterns yield NCI = 0.85, matching organized networks rather than random cultural processes (NCI ≈ 0.1).</p> <p>The "Internet of Places" framework suggests that apparent Upper Paleolithic cultural homogeneity resulted from active information exchange across continent-spanning networks, not recent common ancestry. This challenges fundamental assumptions about Paleolithic social organization and provides new explanations for the "Upper Paleolithic Revolution."</p> <p>This work establishes quantitative methods for prehistoric information system analysis and demonstrates that information—not just energy or materials—was actively managed by Paleolithic societies. The foundations of human collective intelligence were established far earlier than previously recognized.</p> <p>Written by an independent researcher with practical stoneworking experience, combining hands-on knowledge of Paleolithic technologies with advanced statistical analysis.</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_16891744 |
| institution | Zenodo |
| language | eng |
| publishDate | 2025 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
| record_format | zenodo |
| spellingShingle | The Internet of places second version Saarinen, Joonas <p>This paper presents the first rigorous quantitative framework demonstrating that Upper Paleolithic symbolic patterns represent organized information networks rather than isolated cultural development. Using statistical methods from population genetics, acoustics, information theory, and network science, we show that three independent archaeological patterns are statistically incompatible with random processes (p < 10^-200).</p> <p>Key findings:<br>- Wright-Fisher population genetics models prove that maintaining 32 standardized geometric signs across 30,000 years requires active curation, not random drift<br>- Chi-square analysis reveals systematic correlation between cave art placement and acoustic resonance properties (χ² > 1000, p < 0.001) <br>- Sign frequency distributions follow Zipf's Law (γ = -1.02), the statistical signature of natural communication systems<br>- Portable artifact networks exhibit scale-free topology characteristic of organized information exchange<br>- Bayesian model comparison provides decisive evidence (Bayes Factor > 10^100) for the information network hypothesis</p> <p>We introduce the Network Coherence Index (NCI), a novel composite metric for detecting prehistoric information systems. Paleolithic patterns yield NCI = 0.85, matching organized networks rather than random cultural processes (NCI ≈ 0.1).</p> <p>The "Internet of Places" framework suggests that apparent Upper Paleolithic cultural homogeneity resulted from active information exchange across continent-spanning networks, not recent common ancestry. This challenges fundamental assumptions about Paleolithic social organization and provides new explanations for the "Upper Paleolithic Revolution."</p> <p>This work establishes quantitative methods for prehistoric information system analysis and demonstrates that information—not just energy or materials—was actively managed by Paleolithic societies. The foundations of human collective intelligence were established far earlier than previously recognized.</p> <p>Written by an independent researcher with practical stoneworking experience, combining hands-on knowledge of Paleolithic technologies with advanced statistical analysis.</p> |
| title | The Internet of places second version |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16891744 |