The spectacular diversity of personality and behaviour of animals and humans has evoked many hypotheses intended to explain its developmental and evolutionary background. Although the list of the possible contributing mechanisms seems long, we propose that an underemphasised explanation is the division of labour creating negative frequency dependent selection. We use analytical and numerical models of social division of labour to show how selection can create consistent and heritable behavioural differences in a population, where randomly sampled individuals solve a collective task together. We assume that the collective task needs collaboration of individuals performing one of the two possible subtasks. The total benefit of the ...
Division of labor is one of the most fascinating phenomena found in social insects and is probably r...
The concept of inclusive fitness plays a key role in much of sociobiology. Yet most theoretical stud...
The paper presents a evolutionary simulation where the presence of ‘tags’ and an inbuilt specialisa-...
The spectacular diversity of personality and behaviour of animals and humans has evoked many hypothe...
Division of labour is a common feature of social groups, from biofilms to complex animal societies. ...
Division of labour occurs when cooperating individuals specialise to perform different roles. This k...
One of the factors attributed to the success of humans is the ability to divide work among specialis...
Abstract Division of labor in social insects is determinant to their ecological success. Recent mode...
Division of labor in social insects is determinant to their ecological success. Recent models emphas...
Natural selection favors behaviors that increase an organism’s survival and reproduction. However, m...
A key, yet often neglected, component of digital evolution and evolutionary models is the 'selection...
Background Recent work on the complexity of life highlights the roles played by evolutionary forc...
<div><p>Within nature, many groups exhibit division of labor. Individuals in these groups are under ...
To examine the evolutionary basis of a behavior, an established approach (known as the phenotypic ga...
Division of labour occurs in a broad range of organisms. Yet, how division of labour can emerge in t...
Division of labor is one of the most fascinating phenomena found in social insects and is probably r...
The concept of inclusive fitness plays a key role in much of sociobiology. Yet most theoretical stud...
The paper presents a evolutionary simulation where the presence of ‘tags’ and an inbuilt specialisa-...
The spectacular diversity of personality and behaviour of animals and humans has evoked many hypothe...
Division of labour is a common feature of social groups, from biofilms to complex animal societies. ...
Division of labour occurs when cooperating individuals specialise to perform different roles. This k...
One of the factors attributed to the success of humans is the ability to divide work among specialis...
Abstract Division of labor in social insects is determinant to their ecological success. Recent mode...
Division of labor in social insects is determinant to their ecological success. Recent models emphas...
Natural selection favors behaviors that increase an organism’s survival and reproduction. However, m...
A key, yet often neglected, component of digital evolution and evolutionary models is the 'selection...
Background Recent work on the complexity of life highlights the roles played by evolutionary forc...
<div><p>Within nature, many groups exhibit division of labor. Individuals in these groups are under ...
To examine the evolutionary basis of a behavior, an established approach (known as the phenotypic ga...
Division of labour occurs in a broad range of organisms. Yet, how division of labour can emerge in t...
Division of labor is one of the most fascinating phenomena found in social insects and is probably r...
The concept of inclusive fitness plays a key role in much of sociobiology. Yet most theoretical stud...
The paper presents a evolutionary simulation where the presence of ‘tags’ and an inbuilt specialisa-...