This paper considers a series of examples in which evolution supports cooperative behavior in single-shot prisoners' dilemma. Examples include genetic inheritance for asexual siblings and for sexual diploid siblings. We also study two models of ``cultural inheritance''; one in which siblings copy either their parents or an extrafamilial role model and one in which neighbors arrayed along a circular road copy successful neighbors. Finally, we consider a model in which parents choose their behavior, realizing that it may be imitated by their children. A unifying principle of these models is that cooperative behavior more is likely to be sustained in environments where relatively successful organisms are copied relatively often and where...
Traditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused on social...
Altruistic behaviour, which benefits others but harms the actor, can evolve when copies of the unde...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...
This paper considers a series of examples in which evolution supports cooperative behavior in single...
This paper explores the evolutionary foundations of altruism among siblings and extends biologists' ...
Darwinian selection should preclude cooperation from evolving; yet cooperation is widespread among o...
Abstract: We demonstrate how altruism can flourish in a population of nonaltruists. We assume that e...
This article is a contribution to a solution of the problem of how cooperation emerged in human soci...
This article is a contribution to a solution of the problem of how cooperation emerged in human soci...
How selfish does our evolutionary history suggest that humans will be? We explore models in which ...
stimulus to work on this paper to work. I am also grateful to Alan Rogers and Sam Bowles for their h...
We analyse the evolution of the assortment of encounters through active choice of companions among i...
How selfish does our evolutionary history suggest that humans will be? We explore models in which gr...
In recent papers (e.g. Wilson D, 2007; Wilson E, 2007) it has been confirmed that the two standard s...
While prior models of the evolution of altruism have assumed that organisms reproduce asexually, thi...
Traditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused on social...
Altruistic behaviour, which benefits others but harms the actor, can evolve when copies of the unde...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...
This paper considers a series of examples in which evolution supports cooperative behavior in single...
This paper explores the evolutionary foundations of altruism among siblings and extends biologists' ...
Darwinian selection should preclude cooperation from evolving; yet cooperation is widespread among o...
Abstract: We demonstrate how altruism can flourish in a population of nonaltruists. We assume that e...
This article is a contribution to a solution of the problem of how cooperation emerged in human soci...
This article is a contribution to a solution of the problem of how cooperation emerged in human soci...
How selfish does our evolutionary history suggest that humans will be? We explore models in which ...
stimulus to work on this paper to work. I am also grateful to Alan Rogers and Sam Bowles for their h...
We analyse the evolution of the assortment of encounters through active choice of companions among i...
How selfish does our evolutionary history suggest that humans will be? We explore models in which gr...
In recent papers (e.g. Wilson D, 2007; Wilson E, 2007) it has been confirmed that the two standard s...
While prior models of the evolution of altruism have assumed that organisms reproduce asexually, thi...
Traditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused on social...
Altruistic behaviour, which benefits others but harms the actor, can evolve when copies of the unde...
AbstractTraditional models of how cooperative strategies succeed in evolution have largely focused o...