Humans are social beings; people are predisposed to join groups, categorize the social world into groups, and prefer fellow in-group members over out-group members. Social groups in turn compete for individuals and especially for the resources of individuals to maintain the cultural practices and symbolic markers of the group. We modeled the effect of this competition on population level cooperation. Using game theoretic and network science methods, we found that groups would develop and maintain norms that restrict their members to join other groups. If every group can maintain such norms against every other group (the topology of the group-network is complete), the society is composed of closed communities which do not cooperate with each...
In-group favoritism is a central aspect of human behavior. People often help members of their own gr...
The existence of many biological systems, especially human societies, is based on cooperative behavi...
Many societies are divided into multiple smaller groups. Certain kinds of interaction are more likel...
Humans are social beings; people are predisposed to join groups, categorize the social world into gr...
How can we understand the interaction between the social network topology of a population and the pa...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. There is evidence that individuals are oft...
Theoretically informed by recent computational and mathematical studies highlighting the importance ...
Conflicts between groups are among the most challenging problems of mankind. They arise as groups co...
The emergence and institutionalization of cooperation in sizable groups without reciprocity receives...
Group selection models combine selection pressure at the individual level with selection pressure at...
The groups with which we associate influence our actions. This is often the case even when they are ...
Conflicts between groups are among the most challenging problems of mankind. They arise as groups co...
Interactions in real-world social and biological organizations are complex. Spatial structures or so...
Many societies are divided into multiple smaller groups. The defining feature of these groups is tha...
Peer competition and peer cooperation can be intuitively seen as opposing phenomena. However, depend...
In-group favoritism is a central aspect of human behavior. People often help members of their own gr...
The existence of many biological systems, especially human societies, is based on cooperative behavi...
Many societies are divided into multiple smaller groups. Certain kinds of interaction are more likel...
Humans are social beings; people are predisposed to join groups, categorize the social world into gr...
How can we understand the interaction between the social network topology of a population and the pa...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. There is evidence that individuals are oft...
Theoretically informed by recent computational and mathematical studies highlighting the importance ...
Conflicts between groups are among the most challenging problems of mankind. They arise as groups co...
The emergence and institutionalization of cooperation in sizable groups without reciprocity receives...
Group selection models combine selection pressure at the individual level with selection pressure at...
The groups with which we associate influence our actions. This is often the case even when they are ...
Conflicts between groups are among the most challenging problems of mankind. They arise as groups co...
Interactions in real-world social and biological organizations are complex. Spatial structures or so...
Many societies are divided into multiple smaller groups. The defining feature of these groups is tha...
Peer competition and peer cooperation can be intuitively seen as opposing phenomena. However, depend...
In-group favoritism is a central aspect of human behavior. People often help members of their own gr...
The existence of many biological systems, especially human societies, is based on cooperative behavi...
Many societies are divided into multiple smaller groups. Certain kinds of interaction are more likel...