Joint group membership is of major importance for cooperation in humans, and close ties or familiarity with a partner are also thought to promote cooperation in other animals. Here, we present the opposite pattern: female cleaner fish, Labroides dimidiatus, behave more cooperatively (by feeding more against their preference) when paired with an unfamiliar male rather than with their social partner. We propose that cooperation based on asymmetric punishment causes this reversed pattern. Males are larger than and dominant to female partners and are more aggressive to unfamiliar than to familiar female partners. In response, females behave more cooperatively with unfamiliar male partners. Our data suggest that in asymmetric interactions, weake...
Human society is cooperative and characterized by spontaneous prosociality. Comparative studies on e...
Humans are highly social animals and often help unrelated individuals that may never reciprocate the...
SummarySome electrical synapses rectify — they pass current preferentially in one direction. A new s...
SummaryA new study has shown that mixed-sex pairs of cleaner fish provide a better — more cooperativ...
How can cooperation persist if, for one partner, cheating is more profitable than cooperation in eac...
What are the mechanisms that prevent partners from cheating in potentially cooperative interactions ...
SummaryHumans may help others even in situations where the recipient will not reciprocate [1–5]. In ...
There is a wealth of game theoretical approaches to the evolution and maintenance of cooperation bet...
Familiarity influences individual decision-making in many vertebrate species. Here, we propose that ...
Individual recognition has been attributed a crucial role in the evolution of complex social systems...
Familiarity influences individual decision-making in many vertebrate species. Here, we propose that ...
In many instances of cooperation, only one individual has both the potential and the incentive to 'c...
In many instances of cooperation, only one individual has both the potential and the incentive to ‘c...
Mutualisms, in which both participants gain a net benefit, are ubiquitous in all ecosystems, and the...
Cooperative behaviour, especially beyond sexual partnerships, has always puzzled people and is often...
Human society is cooperative and characterized by spontaneous prosociality. Comparative studies on e...
Humans are highly social animals and often help unrelated individuals that may never reciprocate the...
SummarySome electrical synapses rectify — they pass current preferentially in one direction. A new s...
SummaryA new study has shown that mixed-sex pairs of cleaner fish provide a better — more cooperativ...
How can cooperation persist if, for one partner, cheating is more profitable than cooperation in eac...
What are the mechanisms that prevent partners from cheating in potentially cooperative interactions ...
SummaryHumans may help others even in situations where the recipient will not reciprocate [1–5]. In ...
There is a wealth of game theoretical approaches to the evolution and maintenance of cooperation bet...
Familiarity influences individual decision-making in many vertebrate species. Here, we propose that ...
Individual recognition has been attributed a crucial role in the evolution of complex social systems...
Familiarity influences individual decision-making in many vertebrate species. Here, we propose that ...
In many instances of cooperation, only one individual has both the potential and the incentive to 'c...
In many instances of cooperation, only one individual has both the potential and the incentive to ‘c...
Mutualisms, in which both participants gain a net benefit, are ubiquitous in all ecosystems, and the...
Cooperative behaviour, especially beyond sexual partnerships, has always puzzled people and is often...
Human society is cooperative and characterized by spontaneous prosociality. Comparative studies on e...
Humans are highly social animals and often help unrelated individuals that may never reciprocate the...
SummarySome electrical synapses rectify — they pass current preferentially in one direction. A new s...