Assortative mechanisms can overcome tragedies of the commons that otherwise result in dilemma situations. Assortativity criteria include genetics (e.g. kin selection), preferences (e.g. homophily), locations (e.g. spatial interaction) and actions (e.g. meritocracy), usually presuming an exogenously fixed matching mechanism. Here, we endogenize the matching process with the aim of investigating how assortativity itself, jointly with cooperation, is driven by evolution. Our main finding is that only full-or-null assortativities turn out to be long-run stable, their relative stabilities depending on the exact incentive structure of the underlying social dilemma. The resulting social loss is evaluated for general classes of dilemma games, thus ...
This paper discusses the co-evolution of social strategies and an efficiency trait in spatial evolut...
Summary Evolutionary theory provides the biological sciences, with a fundamental and powerful model ...
Why do individuals make different decisions when confronted with similar choices? This paper investi...
Assortative mechanisms can overcome tragedies of the commons that otherwise result in dilemma situat...
This paper presents an evolutionary game theoretic analysis of the dynamics of a population of priso...
Current theories of social evolution predict the direction of selection for a given level of assortm...
This paper explores the quantitative relation between non random, assortative matching and the maint...
Background: Evolution of cooperative behaviour is widely studied in different models where interacti...
Evolution of cooperation has traditionally been studied by assuming that individuals adopt either of...
Public goods are the key features of all human societies and are also important in many animal soci...
Background Evolution of cooperative behaviour is widely studied in different models where interac...
Unveiling the origin and forms of cooperation in nature poses profound challenges in evolutionary ec...
Group selection is easily observed when spatial group structure is imposed on a population. In fact,...
The functioning of animal as well as human societies fundamentally relies on cooperation. Yet, defec...
The question how Darwinian mechanisms lead to the evolution of individually costly cooperative behav...
This paper discusses the co-evolution of social strategies and an efficiency trait in spatial evolut...
Summary Evolutionary theory provides the biological sciences, with a fundamental and powerful model ...
Why do individuals make different decisions when confronted with similar choices? This paper investi...
Assortative mechanisms can overcome tragedies of the commons that otherwise result in dilemma situat...
This paper presents an evolutionary game theoretic analysis of the dynamics of a population of priso...
Current theories of social evolution predict the direction of selection for a given level of assortm...
This paper explores the quantitative relation between non random, assortative matching and the maint...
Background: Evolution of cooperative behaviour is widely studied in different models where interacti...
Evolution of cooperation has traditionally been studied by assuming that individuals adopt either of...
Public goods are the key features of all human societies and are also important in many animal soci...
Background Evolution of cooperative behaviour is widely studied in different models where interac...
Unveiling the origin and forms of cooperation in nature poses profound challenges in evolutionary ec...
Group selection is easily observed when spatial group structure is imposed on a population. In fact,...
The functioning of animal as well as human societies fundamentally relies on cooperation. Yet, defec...
The question how Darwinian mechanisms lead to the evolution of individually costly cooperative behav...
This paper discusses the co-evolution of social strategies and an efficiency trait in spatial evolut...
Summary Evolutionary theory provides the biological sciences, with a fundamental and powerful model ...
Why do individuals make different decisions when confronted with similar choices? This paper investi...