Background: Cooperation is indispensable in human societies, and much progress has been made towards understanding human pro-social decisions. Formal incentives, such as punishment, are suggested as potential effective approaches despite the fact that punishment can crowd out intrinsic motives for cooperation and detrimentally impact efficiency. At the same time, evolutionary biologists have long recognized that cooperation, especially food sharing, is typically efficiently organized in groups living on wild foods, even absent formal economic incentives. Despite its evident importance, the source of this voluntary compliance remains largely uninformed. Drawing on costly signaling theory, and in light of the widely established competitive na...
Cooperation is a paradox: Why should one perform a costly behavior only to increase the fitness of a...
The threat of punishment usually promotes cooperation. However, punishing itself is costly, rare in ...
Previous research shows that competition can increase altruistic behaviour, however, the majority of...
Cooperation is indispensable in human societies, and much progress has been made towards understandi...
In the past decade, experiments on altruistic punishment have played a central role in the study of ...
Explaining the evolution and maintenance of cooperation among unrelated individuals is one of the fu...
International audienceWhy humans cooperate in large groups and with non-kin remains a puzzle for res...
Understanding the ultimate and proximate mechanisms that favour cooperation remains one of the great...
Recent behavioral experiments aimed at understanding the evolutionary foundations of human cooperati...
Sustaining cooperation among unrelated individuals is a fundamental challenge in biology and the soc...
Recent studies in experimental economics have shown that many people have other-regarding preference...
Explaining cooperation is one of the greatest challenges for evolutionary biology [1-3]. It is parti...
SummaryExplaining cooperation is one of the greatest challenges for evolutionary biology [1–3]. It i...
Cooperation is a paradox: Why should one perform a costly behavior only to increase the fitness of a...
The threat of punishment usually promotes cooperation. However, punishing itself is costly, rare in ...
Previous research shows that competition can increase altruistic behaviour, however, the majority of...
Cooperation is indispensable in human societies, and much progress has been made towards understandi...
In the past decade, experiments on altruistic punishment have played a central role in the study of ...
Explaining the evolution and maintenance of cooperation among unrelated individuals is one of the fu...
International audienceWhy humans cooperate in large groups and with non-kin remains a puzzle for res...
Understanding the ultimate and proximate mechanisms that favour cooperation remains one of the great...
Recent behavioral experiments aimed at understanding the evolutionary foundations of human cooperati...
Sustaining cooperation among unrelated individuals is a fundamental challenge in biology and the soc...
Recent studies in experimental economics have shown that many people have other-regarding preference...
Explaining cooperation is one of the greatest challenges for evolutionary biology [1-3]. It is parti...
SummaryExplaining cooperation is one of the greatest challenges for evolutionary biology [1–3]. It i...
Cooperation is a paradox: Why should one perform a costly behavior only to increase the fitness of a...
The threat of punishment usually promotes cooperation. However, punishing itself is costly, rare in ...
Previous research shows that competition can increase altruistic behaviour, however, the majority of...