Population structure plays an important role in the evolution of social behaviours, particularly by generating positive as-sortment on social interactions. This enables cooperative be-haviours that have a net cost to the individual to spread by directing their benefits towards other cooperators. Previous work on the coevolution of population structures and social behaviours has suggested that the evolution of population structuring traits is strongly influenced by the dominant so-cial strategies. Here we investigate the idea that the coevolu-tion of population structure and behaviour can be enhanced in favour of cooperation when there is also assortment on the population structuring traits themselves. This paper presents a simulation model ...
Cooperative behavior that increases the fitness of others at a cost to oneself can be promoted by na...
The existence of many biological systems, especially human societies, is based on cooperative behavi...
In reality, most individuals are prone to vary strategies when interacting with their counterparts; ...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
Current theories of social evolution predict the direction of selection for a given level of assortm...
Introducing the concept of replication strategies this paper studies the evolution of cooperation in...
The emergence of cooperation in populations of selfish individu-als is a fascinating topic that has ...
The evolution of populations is influenced by many factors, and the simple classical models have bee...
<div><p>The evolution of costly cooperation, where cooperators pay a personal cost to benefit others...
Many models proposed to study the evolution of collective action rely on a formalism that represents...
Cooperative behavior that increases the fitness of others at a cost to oneself can be promoted by na...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
In the framework of the evolutionary game theory, two fundamentally different mechanisms, the imitat...
Cooperation is ubiquitous ranging from multicellular organisms to human societies. Population struct...
Cooperative behavior that increases the fitness of others at a cost to oneself can be promoted by na...
The existence of many biological systems, especially human societies, is based on cooperative behavi...
In reality, most individuals are prone to vary strategies when interacting with their counterparts; ...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
Current theories of social evolution predict the direction of selection for a given level of assortm...
Introducing the concept of replication strategies this paper studies the evolution of cooperation in...
The emergence of cooperation in populations of selfish individu-als is a fascinating topic that has ...
The evolution of populations is influenced by many factors, and the simple classical models have bee...
<div><p>The evolution of costly cooperation, where cooperators pay a personal cost to benefit others...
Many models proposed to study the evolution of collective action rely on a formalism that represents...
Cooperative behavior that increases the fitness of others at a cost to oneself can be promoted by na...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
In the framework of the evolutionary game theory, two fundamentally different mechanisms, the imitat...
Cooperation is ubiquitous ranging from multicellular organisms to human societies. Population struct...
Cooperative behavior that increases the fitness of others at a cost to oneself can be promoted by na...
The existence of many biological systems, especially human societies, is based on cooperative behavi...
In reality, most individuals are prone to vary strategies when interacting with their counterparts; ...