<div><p>Mutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coordinated fashion. Hence, while the evolutionary stability of mutualistic cooperation poses no particular theoretical difficulty, its evolutionary emergence faces a chicken and egg problem: an individual cannot benefit from cooperating unless other individuals already do so. Here, we use evolutionary robotic simulations to study the consequences of this problem for the evolution of cooperation. In contrast with standard game-theoretic results, we find that the transition from solitary to cooperative strategies is very unlikely, whether interacting individuals are genetically related (cooperation evolves in 20% of all simulations) or unrelated (only 3% of al...
Studies aimed at explaining the evolution of phenotypic traits have often solely focused on fitness ...
I develop social evolution theory to study the evolution of cooperation as follows: (1) Many organis...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...
International audienceMutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coo...
In principle, any cooperative behaviour can be evolutionarily stable as long as it is incentivized b...
Cooperation is essential in every society, but puzzling from an evolutionary perspective. Here, we d...
Cooperation applies the situations where two or more individuals obtain a net benefit by working tog...
International audienceA growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance o...
Cooperation is widespread across the tree of life, with examples ranging from vertebrates to lichens...
Understanding the behavioral and psychological mechanisms underlying social behaviors is one of the ...
Social interactions involving coordination between individuals are subject to an "evolutionary trap....
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
A growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance of partner choice as a ...
How can cooperation thrive in a selfish world? Recent evolution experiments show how bacteria themse...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
Studies aimed at explaining the evolution of phenotypic traits have often solely focused on fitness ...
I develop social evolution theory to study the evolution of cooperation as follows: (1) Many organis...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...
International audienceMutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coo...
In principle, any cooperative behaviour can be evolutionarily stable as long as it is incentivized b...
Cooperation is essential in every society, but puzzling from an evolutionary perspective. Here, we d...
Cooperation applies the situations where two or more individuals obtain a net benefit by working tog...
International audienceA growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance o...
Cooperation is widespread across the tree of life, with examples ranging from vertebrates to lichens...
Understanding the behavioral and psychological mechanisms underlying social behaviors is one of the ...
Social interactions involving coordination between individuals are subject to an "evolutionary trap....
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
A growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance of partner choice as a ...
How can cooperation thrive in a selfish world? Recent evolution experiments show how bacteria themse...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
Studies aimed at explaining the evolution of phenotypic traits have often solely focused on fitness ...
I develop social evolution theory to study the evolution of cooperation as follows: (1) Many organis...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...