Humans often punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically-unrelated individuals. So-called altruistic punishment poses an evolutionary puzzle because it enforces a cooperation norm that benefits the whole group, but is costly for the punisher. Under the “big mistake” (or “mismatch”) hypothesis, social behavior such as punishment evolved by individual selection at a time when repeated interactions with kin prevailed. It then misfired in modern humans, who “mistakenly” apply it in sporadic interactions with unrelated individuals. In contrast, cultural group selection theories emphasize cultural differences in normative behavior and the role of intergroup competition and punishment for the emergence of large-scale cooperat...
Collective action, or the large-scale cooperation in the pursuit of public goods, has been suggested...
We model the coevolution of behavioral strategies and social learning rules in the context of a coop...
Punitive behaviours are often assumed to be the result of an instinct for punishment. This instinct ...
Humans often punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically-unrelated individuals...
Humans often ‘altruistically’ punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically unre...
Cultural group selection theorists propose that humans evolved prosocial preferences. These claims r...
The conundrum of cooperation has received increasing attention during the last decade. In this quest...
In the past decade, experiments on altruistic punishment have played a central role in the study of ...
<div><p>Humans everywhere cooperate in groups to achieve benefits not attainable by individuals. Ind...
Under the conditions prevalent in the late Pleistocene epoch (small hunter-gatherer groups and freq...
Explaining altruistic cooperation is one of the greatest challenges faced by sociologists, economist...
Human cooperation is enigmatic, as organisms are expected, by evolutionary and economic theory, to a...
Most current attempts to explain the evolution - through individual selection - of pro-social behavi...
People cooperate in public goods games even when an individual’s utility maximizing strategy is to d...
# The Author(s) 2012. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Collec...
Collective action, or the large-scale cooperation in the pursuit of public goods, has been suggested...
We model the coevolution of behavioral strategies and social learning rules in the context of a coop...
Punitive behaviours are often assumed to be the result of an instinct for punishment. This instinct ...
Humans often punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically-unrelated individuals...
Humans often ‘altruistically’ punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically unre...
Cultural group selection theorists propose that humans evolved prosocial preferences. These claims r...
The conundrum of cooperation has received increasing attention during the last decade. In this quest...
In the past decade, experiments on altruistic punishment have played a central role in the study of ...
<div><p>Humans everywhere cooperate in groups to achieve benefits not attainable by individuals. Ind...
Under the conditions prevalent in the late Pleistocene epoch (small hunter-gatherer groups and freq...
Explaining altruistic cooperation is one of the greatest challenges faced by sociologists, economist...
Human cooperation is enigmatic, as organisms are expected, by evolutionary and economic theory, to a...
Most current attempts to explain the evolution - through individual selection - of pro-social behavi...
People cooperate in public goods games even when an individual’s utility maximizing strategy is to d...
# The Author(s) 2012. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Collec...
Collective action, or the large-scale cooperation in the pursuit of public goods, has been suggested...
We model the coevolution of behavioral strategies and social learning rules in the context of a coop...
Punitive behaviours are often assumed to be the result of an instinct for punishment. This instinct ...