International audienceA growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance of partner choice as a mechanism to promote the evolution of cooperation, especially in humans. In this paper, we focus on the question of the precise quantitative level of cooperation that should evolve under this mechanism. When individuals compete to be chosen by others, their level of investment in cooperation evolves towards higher values, a process called competitive altruism, or runaway cooperation. Using a classic adaptive dynamics model, we first show that, when the cost of changing partner is low, this runaway process can lead to a profitless escalation of cooperation. In the extreme, when partner choice is entirely frictionless, coo...
AbstractFor cooperation to evolve, some mechanism must limit the rate at which cooperators are expos...
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
Through mathematical modeling and game theory, Martin Nowak of Harvard University highlights the cru...
International audienceA growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance o...
A growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance of partner choice as a ...
<div><p>Mutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coordinated fashi...
Understanding the behavioral and psychological mechanisms underlying social behaviors is one of the ...
Background Cooperation is ubiquitous in biological systems, yet its evolution is a long lasting evol...
We analyse the evolution of the assortment of encounters through active choice of companions among i...
The existence of cooperation among non-kin in many species constitutes an apparent paradox for evolu...
This paper offers a new and robust model of the emergence and persistence of cooperation. In the mod...
Summary Evolutionary theory provides the biological sciences, with a fundamental and powerful model ...
Mutual helping for direct benefits can be explained by various game theoretical models, which differ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
We set up an analytical framework focusing on the problem of interaction over time when economic age...
AbstractFor cooperation to evolve, some mechanism must limit the rate at which cooperators are expos...
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
Through mathematical modeling and game theory, Martin Nowak of Harvard University highlights the cru...
International audienceA growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance o...
A growing number of experimental and theoretical studies show the importance of partner choice as a ...
<div><p>Mutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coordinated fashi...
Understanding the behavioral and psychological mechanisms underlying social behaviors is one of the ...
Background Cooperation is ubiquitous in biological systems, yet its evolution is a long lasting evol...
We analyse the evolution of the assortment of encounters through active choice of companions among i...
The existence of cooperation among non-kin in many species constitutes an apparent paradox for evolu...
This paper offers a new and robust model of the emergence and persistence of cooperation. In the mod...
Summary Evolutionary theory provides the biological sciences, with a fundamental and powerful model ...
Mutual helping for direct benefits can be explained by various game theoretical models, which differ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
We set up an analytical framework focusing on the problem of interaction over time when economic age...
AbstractFor cooperation to evolve, some mechanism must limit the rate at which cooperators are expos...
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
Through mathematical modeling and game theory, Martin Nowak of Harvard University highlights the cru...