Understanding the evolution of social behaviours such as altruism and spite is a long-standing problem that has generated thousands of articles and heated debates. Previous theoretical studies showed that whether altruism and spite evolve may be contingent on seemingly artificial model features, such as which rule is chosen to update the population (e.g., Birth-Death or Death-Birth), and whether the benefits and costs of sociality affect fecundity or survival. Here we unify these features in a single comprehensive framework. We derive a general condition for social behaviour to be favoured over non-social behaviour, which is applicable in a large class of models for structured populations of fixed size. We recover previous results as specia...
Social organization correlates with longevity across animal taxa. This correlation has been explaine...
Biological altruism, defined as a behaviour that benefits others at an apparent cost to the focal ind...
International audienceNatural selection may favor two very different types of social behaviors that ...
Understanding the evolution of social behaviours such as altruism and spite is a long-standing probl...
How social traits such as altruism and spite evolve remains an open question in evolutionary biology...
How social traits such as altruism and spite evolve remains an open question in evolutionary biology...
In natural populations, dispersal tends to be limited so that individuals are in local competition w...
It is now widely appreciated that competition between kin inhibits the evolution of altruism. In sta...
International audienceWe survey the population genetic basis of social evolution, using a logically ...
The concept of inclusive fitness plays a key role in much of sociobiology. Yet most theoretical stud...
International audienceThe theoretical investigation of how spatial structure affects the evolution o...
Inclusive fitness theory concerns the study of social traits. Often, individuals differ in their phe...
Our understanding of the evolutionary stability of socially‐selected traits is dominated by sexual s...
It is now widely appreciated that competition between kin inhibits the evolution of altruism. In sta...
abstract: Using an individual-based and genetically explicit sim-ulation model, we explore the evolu...
Social organization correlates with longevity across animal taxa. This correlation has been explaine...
Biological altruism, defined as a behaviour that benefits others at an apparent cost to the focal ind...
International audienceNatural selection may favor two very different types of social behaviors that ...
Understanding the evolution of social behaviours such as altruism and spite is a long-standing probl...
How social traits such as altruism and spite evolve remains an open question in evolutionary biology...
How social traits such as altruism and spite evolve remains an open question in evolutionary biology...
In natural populations, dispersal tends to be limited so that individuals are in local competition w...
It is now widely appreciated that competition between kin inhibits the evolution of altruism. In sta...
International audienceWe survey the population genetic basis of social evolution, using a logically ...
The concept of inclusive fitness plays a key role in much of sociobiology. Yet most theoretical stud...
International audienceThe theoretical investigation of how spatial structure affects the evolution o...
Inclusive fitness theory concerns the study of social traits. Often, individuals differ in their phe...
Our understanding of the evolutionary stability of socially‐selected traits is dominated by sexual s...
It is now widely appreciated that competition between kin inhibits the evolution of altruism. In sta...
abstract: Using an individual-based and genetically explicit sim-ulation model, we explore the evolu...
Social organization correlates with longevity across animal taxa. This correlation has been explaine...
Biological altruism, defined as a behaviour that benefits others at an apparent cost to the focal ind...
International audienceNatural selection may favor two very different types of social behaviors that ...