The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping behaviors is more likely with cultural transmission than without. Here we evaluate this idea through a comparative analysis of selection on helping under both genetic and cultural inheritance. We develop two simple models for the evolution of helping through cultural group selection: one in which selection on the trait depends solely on Darwinian fitness effects and one in which selection is driven by nonreproductive factors, specifically imitation of strategies achieving higher payoffs. We show that when cultural variants affect Darwinian fitness, the selection pressure on helping can be markedly increased relative to that under genetic transmi...
The role of cultural group selection in the evolution of human cooperation is hotly debated. It has ...
According to cultural evolutionary theory in the tradition of Boyd and Richerson, cultural evolution...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the simula...
The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping beh...
Limited migration results in kin selective pressure on helping behaviors under a wide range of ecolo...
Helping behaviors can be innate, learned by copying others (cultural transmission) or individually l...
One of the difficulties with cultural group selection theory highlighted in the review by Smith (202...
Human cooperation is highly unusual. We live in large groups composed mostly of non-relatives. Evolu...
Altruism (helping others at a cost to oneself) may evolve via group selection if the cost of altruis...
The effect of learned culture (e.g., birdsong dialects and human languages) on genetic divergence is...
Human evolution depends on the co-evolution between genetically determined behaviors and socially tr...
In the human sciences, cultural evolution is often viewed as an autonomous process free of genetic i...
A cornerstone result of sociobiology states that limited dispersal can induce kin competition to off...
The role of cultural group selection in the evolution of human cooperation is hotly debated. It has ...
The effect of learned culture (e.g., birdsong dialects and human languages) on genetic divergence is...
The role of cultural group selection in the evolution of human cooperation is hotly debated. It has ...
According to cultural evolutionary theory in the tradition of Boyd and Richerson, cultural evolution...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the simula...
The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping beh...
Limited migration results in kin selective pressure on helping behaviors under a wide range of ecolo...
Helping behaviors can be innate, learned by copying others (cultural transmission) or individually l...
One of the difficulties with cultural group selection theory highlighted in the review by Smith (202...
Human cooperation is highly unusual. We live in large groups composed mostly of non-relatives. Evolu...
Altruism (helping others at a cost to oneself) may evolve via group selection if the cost of altruis...
The effect of learned culture (e.g., birdsong dialects and human languages) on genetic divergence is...
Human evolution depends on the co-evolution between genetically determined behaviors and socially tr...
In the human sciences, cultural evolution is often viewed as an autonomous process free of genetic i...
A cornerstone result of sociobiology states that limited dispersal can induce kin competition to off...
The role of cultural group selection in the evolution of human cooperation is hotly debated. It has ...
The effect of learned culture (e.g., birdsong dialects and human languages) on genetic divergence is...
The role of cultural group selection in the evolution of human cooperation is hotly debated. It has ...
According to cultural evolutionary theory in the tradition of Boyd and Richerson, cultural evolution...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the simula...