<div><p>Longevity has long been recognised as a key facilitator of reciprocal altruism because repeated cooperation of partners hinges on mutual survival. Although demographic tools can be used to quantify mutual survival and expected overlapping lifespans, studies on the evolutionary theory of cooperation take only limited advantage of demography. Overlap of lifespans depends on variation in survival across ages and can be high or low independently of high or low life expectancies. Here we develop formal demographic measures to study the complex relationships between shared life expectancy of two birth cohort peers, the proportion of their lives that they can expect to overlap, and longevity. We simulate age-specific mortality schedules us...
Longevity is a life-history trait that is shaped by natural selection. Evolution will shape mortalit...
This paper contributes to the current discussion on longevity by investigating the long-term dynamic...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...
Longevity has long been recognised as a key facilitator of reciprocal altruism because repeated coop...
Social organization correlates with longevity across animal taxa. This correlation has been explaine...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
The concept of the force of natural selection was developed to explain the evolution of ageing. Afte...
As people live longer, ages at death are becoming more similar. This dual advance over the last two ...
Individuals care not only about their own survival, but also about the survival of other persons. Ho...
Cooperatively breeding animals live longer than their solitary counterparts. This has been suggested...
Recent empirical studies have found various patterns in the correlations between lifespan inequality...
International audienceIndividuals care not only about their own survival, but also about the surviva...
Living in social groups could influence the evolution of senescence and longevity by affecting key l...
Ageing reduces fitness, but how ageing evolves is still unclear. Evolutionary theory of ageing hinge...
Longevity is a life-history trait that is shaped by natural selection. Evolution will shape mortalit...
This paper contributes to the current discussion on longevity by investigating the long-term dynamic...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...
Longevity has long been recognised as a key facilitator of reciprocal altruism because repeated coop...
Social organization correlates with longevity across animal taxa. This correlation has been explaine...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
Senescence or ageing is an increase in mortality and/or decline in fertility with increasing age. Ev...
The concept of the force of natural selection was developed to explain the evolution of ageing. Afte...
As people live longer, ages at death are becoming more similar. This dual advance over the last two ...
Individuals care not only about their own survival, but also about the survival of other persons. Ho...
Cooperatively breeding animals live longer than their solitary counterparts. This has been suggested...
Recent empirical studies have found various patterns in the correlations between lifespan inequality...
International audienceIndividuals care not only about their own survival, but also about the surviva...
Living in social groups could influence the evolution of senescence and longevity by affecting key l...
Ageing reduces fitness, but how ageing evolves is still unclear. Evolutionary theory of ageing hinge...
Longevity is a life-history trait that is shaped by natural selection. Evolution will shape mortalit...
This paper contributes to the current discussion on longevity by investigating the long-term dynamic...
Senescence, the increasing risk of mortality and/or decreasing rate of reproductive success, is, at ...