Altruism is favored by natural selection provided that it delivers sufficient benefits to relatives. An altruist’s valuation of her relatives depends upon the extent to which they carry copies of her genes – relatedness – and also on the extent to which they are able to transmit their own genes to future generations – reproductive value. However, although relatedness has received a great deal of attention with regard to altruism, reproductive value has been surprisingly neglected. We review how reproductive value modulates patterns of altruism in relation to individual differences in age, sex, and general condition, and discuss how social partners may manipulate each other’s reproductive value to incentivize altruism. This topic presents op...
Cooperation among kin is common across the natural world and can be explained in terms of inclusive ...
Explaining altruism through an evolutionary lens has been a challenge for evolutionary theorists. Wh...
The genetic evolution of altruism (i.e., a behavior resulting in a net reduction of the survival and...
Funding: AG is supported by a Natural Environment Research Council Independent Research Fellowship (...
When the cost of altruism is low, individuals are more likely to help non-kin (i.e., friends and rom...
Altruistic or selfless behaviour is a major puzzle for evolutionary biology which predicts competiti...
Altruistic behaviour, which benefits others but harms the actor, can evolve when copies of the unde...
In biology an altruistic act increases the reproductive fitness of a member of the same species (a c...
We examined how different types of reproductive limitations — functional (schizoid personality disor...
According to Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection altruistic behavior appears to be a p...
Altruism and selfishness are 30–50% heritable in man in both Western and non-Western populations. Th...
Men's altruism may have evolved, via female choice, as a signal of either their genetic quality or t...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
Humans are characterized by an unusual level of prosociality. Despite this, considerable indirect ev...
Cooperation among kin is common across the natural world and can be explained in terms of inclusive ...
Explaining altruism through an evolutionary lens has been a challenge for evolutionary theorists. Wh...
The genetic evolution of altruism (i.e., a behavior resulting in a net reduction of the survival and...
Funding: AG is supported by a Natural Environment Research Council Independent Research Fellowship (...
When the cost of altruism is low, individuals are more likely to help non-kin (i.e., friends and rom...
Altruistic or selfless behaviour is a major puzzle for evolutionary biology which predicts competiti...
Altruistic behaviour, which benefits others but harms the actor, can evolve when copies of the unde...
In biology an altruistic act increases the reproductive fitness of a member of the same species (a c...
We examined how different types of reproductive limitations — functional (schizoid personality disor...
According to Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection altruistic behavior appears to be a p...
Altruism and selfishness are 30–50% heritable in man in both Western and non-Western populations. Th...
Men's altruism may have evolved, via female choice, as a signal of either their genetic quality or t...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
Humans are characterized by an unusual level of prosociality. Despite this, considerable indirect ev...
Cooperation among kin is common across the natural world and can be explained in terms of inclusive ...
Explaining altruism through an evolutionary lens has been a challenge for evolutionary theorists. Wh...
The genetic evolution of altruism (i.e., a behavior resulting in a net reduction of the survival and...