Helping behaviors can be innate, learned by copying others (cultural transmission) or individually learned de novo. These three possibilities are often entangled in debates on the evolution of helping in humans. Here we discuss their similarities and differences, and argue that evolutionary biologists underestimate the role of individual learning in the expression of helping behaviors in humans
Humans are arguably unique in the extent and scale of cooperation with unrelated individuals. While ...
In natural populations, dispersal tends to be limited so that individuals are in local competition w...
one of the key human characteristics is our willingness to help others in need. As adults we do this...
The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping beh...
Humans exhibit extensive large-scale cooperation, of a form unprecedented in the natural world. Here...
The contributions of biology versus socialization practices to the emergence of human altruism have ...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the simula...
Limited migration results in kin selective pressure on helping behaviors under a wide range of ecolo...
One of the most fascinating topics in evolutionary biology is how and why organisms cooperate with e...
AcceptedReviewIt is often assumed in experiments and models that social learning abilities – how oft...
The apparent adaptive value of culture was once assumed to be an explanation for the evolution of so...
Cooperation is central to what makes us human. It is so deeply entrenched in our nature that it can ...
Social learning, defined as the imitation of behaviors performed by others, is recognized as a disti...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the sim-ul...
The aim of this paper is to provide non-specialist readers with an introduction to some current cont...
Humans are arguably unique in the extent and scale of cooperation with unrelated individuals. While ...
In natural populations, dispersal tends to be limited so that individuals are in local competition w...
one of the key human characteristics is our willingness to help others in need. As adults we do this...
The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping beh...
Humans exhibit extensive large-scale cooperation, of a form unprecedented in the natural world. Here...
The contributions of biology versus socialization practices to the emergence of human altruism have ...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the simula...
Limited migration results in kin selective pressure on helping behaviors under a wide range of ecolo...
One of the most fascinating topics in evolutionary biology is how and why organisms cooperate with e...
AcceptedReviewIt is often assumed in experiments and models that social learning abilities – how oft...
The apparent adaptive value of culture was once assumed to be an explanation for the evolution of so...
Cooperation is central to what makes us human. It is so deeply entrenched in our nature that it can ...
Social learning, defined as the imitation of behaviors performed by others, is recognized as a disti...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the sim-ul...
The aim of this paper is to provide non-specialist readers with an introduction to some current cont...
Humans are arguably unique in the extent and scale of cooperation with unrelated individuals. While ...
In natural populations, dispersal tends to be limited so that individuals are in local competition w...
one of the key human characteristics is our willingness to help others in need. As adults we do this...