Current theories of social evolution predict the direction of selection for a given level of assortment. What remains unclear is how to determine the direction of selection on assortment itself if this were subject to evolutionary change. Here we define and analyse a simple model that allows us to investigate the evolution of assortment. We find that there is only a positive selection gradient for increased assortment if the population is polymorphic in the cooperative trait. We further show that if the individuals in question engage in multiple cooperative dilemmas simultaneously then there may be a continued selection on increased assortment which is ultimatelysufficient to resolve severe dilemmas such as the prisoner’s dilemma
Reciprocity and repeated games have been at the center of attention when studying the evolution of h...
Explaining the evolution of cooperation has been under debate for a long time (reviewed in Frank 199...
Evolution of cooperation has traditionally been studied by assuming that individuals adopt either of...
Population structure plays an important role in the evolution of social behaviours, particularly by ...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
This paper presents an evolutionary game theoretic analysis of the dynamics of a population of priso...
The question how Darwinian mechanisms lead to the evolution of individually costly cooperative behav...
<div><p>The evolution of costly cooperation, where cooperators pay a personal cost to benefit others...
Assortative mechanisms can overcome tragedies of the commons that otherwise result in dilemma situat...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
A key, yet often neglected, component of digital evolution and evolutionary models is the 'selection...
We study the combined influence of selection and random fluctuations on the evolutionary dynamics of...
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
This paper discusses the co-evolution of social strategies and an efficiency trait in spatial evolut...
Reciprocity and repeated games have been at the center of attention when studying the evolution of h...
Explaining the evolution of cooperation has been under debate for a long time (reviewed in Frank 199...
Evolution of cooperation has traditionally been studied by assuming that individuals adopt either of...
Population structure plays an important role in the evolution of social behaviours, particularly by ...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
This paper presents an evolutionary game theoretic analysis of the dynamics of a population of priso...
The question how Darwinian mechanisms lead to the evolution of individually costly cooperative behav...
<div><p>The evolution of costly cooperation, where cooperators pay a personal cost to benefit others...
Assortative mechanisms can overcome tragedies of the commons that otherwise result in dilemma situat...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
A key, yet often neglected, component of digital evolution and evolutionary models is the 'selection...
We study the combined influence of selection and random fluctuations on the evolutionary dynamics of...
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
This paper discusses the co-evolution of social strategies and an efficiency trait in spatial evolut...
Reciprocity and repeated games have been at the center of attention when studying the evolution of h...
Explaining the evolution of cooperation has been under debate for a long time (reviewed in Frank 199...
Evolution of cooperation has traditionally been studied by assuming that individuals adopt either of...