This paper contributes to the explanation of human cooperative behaviour, examining the implications of Brian Skyrms’ modelling of the prisoner’s dilemma (PD). Augmenting a PD with signalling strategies promotes cooperation, but a challenge that must be addressed is what prevents signals being subverted by deceptive behaviour. Empirical results suggest that emotional displays can play a signalling role and, to some extent, are secure from subversion. I examine proximate explanations and then offer an evolutionary explanation for the translucency of emotional displays. Selection acts on the basis of lifetime fitness consequences and, crucially for my argument, the intensity of selection decreases over the course of a lifetime. Hence we tend ...
As decision-making research becomes more popular, the inclusion of personality traits has emerged as...
AbstractFor cooperation to evolve, some mechanism must limit the rate at which cooperators are expos...
<div><p>Most theories of social exchange distinguish between two different types of cooperation, dep...
This paper contributes to the explanation of human cooperative behaviour, examining the implications...
I argue that cooperative behaviour can evolve in a modified prisoner's dilemma (PD) that includes si...
Cooperating with individuals whose altruism is not motivated by genuine prosocial emotions could hav...
At any one time, a population is likely to contain individuals that are either permanently incapable...
Our attention is focused on how individual emotions influence collective behaviors, which captures a...
The evolution of unconditional cooperation is one of the fundamental problems in science. A new solu...
Our study contributes to the debate on the evolution of cooperation in the single shot Prisoner’s Di...
We explore the signal value of emotion and reason in human cooperation. Across four experiments util...
The human tendency to cooperate with nonkin even in short-run relationships remains a puzzle. Recent...
Cooperative behaviour lies at the very basis of human societies, yet its evolutionary origin remains...
In the last century, academics have focussed on understanding how we make decisions and they have pr...
As decision-making research becomes more popular, the inclusion of personality traits has emerged as...
AbstractFor cooperation to evolve, some mechanism must limit the rate at which cooperators are expos...
<div><p>Most theories of social exchange distinguish between two different types of cooperation, dep...
This paper contributes to the explanation of human cooperative behaviour, examining the implications...
I argue that cooperative behaviour can evolve in a modified prisoner's dilemma (PD) that includes si...
Cooperating with individuals whose altruism is not motivated by genuine prosocial emotions could hav...
At any one time, a population is likely to contain individuals that are either permanently incapable...
Our attention is focused on how individual emotions influence collective behaviors, which captures a...
The evolution of unconditional cooperation is one of the fundamental problems in science. A new solu...
Our study contributes to the debate on the evolution of cooperation in the single shot Prisoner’s Di...
We explore the signal value of emotion and reason in human cooperation. Across four experiments util...
The human tendency to cooperate with nonkin even in short-run relationships remains a puzzle. Recent...
Cooperative behaviour lies at the very basis of human societies, yet its evolutionary origin remains...
In the last century, academics have focussed on understanding how we make decisions and they have pr...
As decision-making research becomes more popular, the inclusion of personality traits has emerged as...
AbstractFor cooperation to evolve, some mechanism must limit the rate at which cooperators are expos...
<div><p>Most theories of social exchange distinguish between two different types of cooperation, dep...