SummaryHumans show great flexibility in adjusting their levels of cooperation to account for current and future circumstances. For example, levels of cooperation are higher if there is more competition at the level of the whole population than with interacting partners [1] and when individuals are likely to gain social prestige [2]. Humans also show the capacity to increase current levels of cooperation to account for future payoffs if it is likely that repeated interactions will occur with the same partner (known as ‘the Shadow of the Future’) [3]. Here, we provide the first evidence for this capacity in a non-human animal, the cleaner fish Labroides bicolor. L. bicolor individuals show uneven frequency of use of different areas within a l...
Mutualistic interactions involve two species beneficially cooperating, but it is not clear how these...
© 2017 by The University of Chicago. 0003-0147/2017/18906-56634$15.00. All rights reserved. Models o...
Deviations from model-based predictions of strategies leading to stable cooperation between unrelate...
SummaryHumans show great flexibility in adjusting their levels of cooperation to account for current...
There is a wealth of game theoretical approaches to the evolution and maintenance of cooperation bet...
How can cooperation persist if, for one partner, cheating is more profitable than cooperation in eac...
Individual recognition has been attributed a crucial role in the evolution of complex social systems...
SummaryHumans may help others even in situations where the recipient will not reciprocate [1–5]. In ...
Humans are highly social animals and often help unrelated individuals that may never reciprocate the...
What are the mechanisms that prevent partners from cheating in potentially cooperative interactions ...
We present field experiments showing that levels of cooperation quantitatively predict the duration ...
The most commonly asked question about cooperative interactions is how they are maintained when chea...
Service providers may vary service quality depending on whether they work alone or provide the servi...
AbstractThe most commonly asked question about cooperative interactions is how they are maintained w...
In many instances of cooperation, only one individual has both the potential and the incentive to ‘c...
Mutualistic interactions involve two species beneficially cooperating, but it is not clear how these...
© 2017 by The University of Chicago. 0003-0147/2017/18906-56634$15.00. All rights reserved. Models o...
Deviations from model-based predictions of strategies leading to stable cooperation between unrelate...
SummaryHumans show great flexibility in adjusting their levels of cooperation to account for current...
There is a wealth of game theoretical approaches to the evolution and maintenance of cooperation bet...
How can cooperation persist if, for one partner, cheating is more profitable than cooperation in eac...
Individual recognition has been attributed a crucial role in the evolution of complex social systems...
SummaryHumans may help others even in situations where the recipient will not reciprocate [1–5]. In ...
Humans are highly social animals and often help unrelated individuals that may never reciprocate the...
What are the mechanisms that prevent partners from cheating in potentially cooperative interactions ...
We present field experiments showing that levels of cooperation quantitatively predict the duration ...
The most commonly asked question about cooperative interactions is how they are maintained when chea...
Service providers may vary service quality depending on whether they work alone or provide the servi...
AbstractThe most commonly asked question about cooperative interactions is how they are maintained w...
In many instances of cooperation, only one individual has both the potential and the incentive to ‘c...
Mutualistic interactions involve two species beneficially cooperating, but it is not clear how these...
© 2017 by The University of Chicago. 0003-0147/2017/18906-56634$15.00. All rights reserved. Models o...
Deviations from model-based predictions of strategies leading to stable cooperation between unrelate...