How selfish does our evolutionary history suggest that humans will be? We explore models in which groups are formed and dissolved and where reproduction of individuals is determined by their payoffs in a game played within groups. If groups are formed ``randomly'' and reproductive success of group founders is determined by a multi-person prisoners' dilemma game, then selfish behavior will prevail over maximization of group payoffs. However, interesting models exist in which ``group selection'' sustains cooperative behavior. Forces that support cooperative behavior include assortative matching in groups, group longevity, and punishment-based group norms
Abstract: We study environments in which an individual gets a higher payoff from defecting than from...
We show that a new, simple, and robust general mechanism for the social suppression of within-group ...
Natural selection produces cognitive systems that are well designed for solving ancestral adaptive p...
How selfish does our evolutionary history suggest that humans will be? We explore models in which gr...
Despite many compelling applications in economics, sociobiology, and evolutionary psychology, group ...
Despite many compelling applications in economics, sociobiology, and evolutionary psychology, group ...
<div><p>Despite many compelling applications in economics, sociobiology, and evolutionary psychology...
Natural selection favors behaviors that increase an organism’s survival and reproduction. However, m...
<div><p>Humans everywhere cooperate in groups to achieve benefits not attainable by individuals. Ind...
Group selection is an oft-cited but controversial explanation for the survival of altruism. Rather t...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...
Traditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused on social...
Selection on the level of loosely associated groups has been suggested as a route towards the evolut...
'Group selection' is an oft-cited but controversial explanation for the survival of altruism. Rather...
In the past decade, experiments on altruistic punishment have played a central role in the study of ...
Abstract: We study environments in which an individual gets a higher payoff from defecting than from...
We show that a new, simple, and robust general mechanism for the social suppression of within-group ...
Natural selection produces cognitive systems that are well designed for solving ancestral adaptive p...
How selfish does our evolutionary history suggest that humans will be? We explore models in which gr...
Despite many compelling applications in economics, sociobiology, and evolutionary psychology, group ...
Despite many compelling applications in economics, sociobiology, and evolutionary psychology, group ...
<div><p>Despite many compelling applications in economics, sociobiology, and evolutionary psychology...
Natural selection favors behaviors that increase an organism’s survival and reproduction. However, m...
<div><p>Humans everywhere cooperate in groups to achieve benefits not attainable by individuals. Ind...
Group selection is an oft-cited but controversial explanation for the survival of altruism. Rather t...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...
Traditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused on social...
Selection on the level of loosely associated groups has been suggested as a route towards the evolut...
'Group selection' is an oft-cited but controversial explanation for the survival of altruism. Rather...
In the past decade, experiments on altruistic punishment have played a central role in the study of ...
Abstract: We study environments in which an individual gets a higher payoff from defecting than from...
We show that a new, simple, and robust general mechanism for the social suppression of within-group ...
Natural selection produces cognitive systems that are well designed for solving ancestral adaptive p...