Cooperation is common across nonhuman animal taxa, from the hunting of large game in lions to the harvesting of building materials in ants. Theorists have proposed a number of models to explain the evolution of cooperative behavior. These ultimate explanations, however, rarely consider the proximate constraints on the implementation of cooperative behavior. Here we review several types of cooperation and propose a suite of cognitive abilities required for each type to evolve. We propose that several types of cooperation, though theoretically possible and functionally adaptive, have not evolved in some animal species because of cognitive constraints. We argue, therefore, that future modeling efforts and experimental investigations into the a...
Nature is full of struggle, as predicted by the theory of evolution through natural selection, yet t...
In principle, any cooperative behaviour can be evolutionarily stable as long as it is incentivized b...
Animals often aid others without gaining any immediate benefits. Although these acts seem to reduce ...
Cooperation is common across nonhuman animal taxa, from the hunting of large game in lions to the ha...
While the evolution of cooperative behaviors has generated an intense debate among evolutionists an...
The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the pote...
The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the pote...
The social brain hypothesis (Humphrey, 1976) poses that the intricacies of social life may have been...
Cooperation often involves behaviours that reduce immediate payoffs for actors. Delayed benefits hav...
<div><p>Mutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coordinated fashi...
Abstract—Biology can offer insight into how realistic artificial agents and complex interactions bet...
Natural selection favours genes that increase an organism's ability to survive and reproduce. This w...
Funding: Templeton World Charity Foundation (Grant Number(s): TWCF0264).Collaboration or social inte...
There is growing comparative evidence that the cognitive bases of cooperation are not unique to huma...
AbstractCollaboration or social interactions in which two or more individuals coordinate their behav...
Nature is full of struggle, as predicted by the theory of evolution through natural selection, yet t...
In principle, any cooperative behaviour can be evolutionarily stable as long as it is incentivized b...
Animals often aid others without gaining any immediate benefits. Although these acts seem to reduce ...
Cooperation is common across nonhuman animal taxa, from the hunting of large game in lions to the ha...
While the evolution of cooperative behaviors has generated an intense debate among evolutionists an...
The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the pote...
The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the pote...
The social brain hypothesis (Humphrey, 1976) poses that the intricacies of social life may have been...
Cooperation often involves behaviours that reduce immediate payoffs for actors. Delayed benefits hav...
<div><p>Mutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coordinated fashi...
Abstract—Biology can offer insight into how realistic artificial agents and complex interactions bet...
Natural selection favours genes that increase an organism's ability to survive and reproduce. This w...
Funding: Templeton World Charity Foundation (Grant Number(s): TWCF0264).Collaboration or social inte...
There is growing comparative evidence that the cognitive bases of cooperation are not unique to huma...
AbstractCollaboration or social interactions in which two or more individuals coordinate their behav...
Nature is full of struggle, as predicted by the theory of evolution through natural selection, yet t...
In principle, any cooperative behaviour can be evolutionarily stable as long as it is incentivized b...
Animals often aid others without gaining any immediate benefits. Although these acts seem to reduce ...