Whether or not to change strategy depends not only on the personal success of each individual, but also on the success of others. Using this as motivation, we study the evolution of cooperation in games that describe social dilemmas, where the propensity to adopt a different strategy depends both on individual fitness as well as on the strategies of neighbors. Regardless of whether the evolutionary process is governed by pairwise or group interactions, we show that plugging into the wisdom of groups strongly promotes cooperative behavior. The more the wider knowledge is taken into account the more the evolution of defectors is impaired. We explain this by revealing a dynamically decelerated invasion process, by means of which interfaces sep...
Abstract Background In recent years it has been found that the combination of evolutionary game theo...
Evolutionary game theory on spatial structures has received increasing attention during the past dec...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. There is evidence that individuals are oft...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
Researchers in many domains use social dilemmas to explore the conditions necessary for cooperation ...
Human societies are unique in the level of cooperation among non-kin. Evolutionary models explaining...
Abstract. Humans contribute to a broad range of cooperative endeav-ors. In many of them, the amount ...
We study the evolution of cooperation in structured populations within popular models of social dile...
(INTRODUCTION) Human societies are characterised by high degrees of reciprocal altruism between unre...
<div><p>Mutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coordinated fashi...
Cooperation is essential in every society, but puzzling from an evolutionary perspective. Here, we d...
We study the evolution of cooperation in the spatial prisoner's dilemma game, where besides unc...
Whether by nature or nurture, humans often respond differently when facing the same situation. Yet, ...
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
BACKGROUND: From the simplest living organisms to human societies, cooperation among individuals eme...
Abstract Background In recent years it has been found that the combination of evolutionary game theo...
Evolutionary game theory on spatial structures has received increasing attention during the past dec...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. There is evidence that individuals are oft...
Cooperative social behaviours are ubiquitous in nature and essential to biological theory, yet they ...
Researchers in many domains use social dilemmas to explore the conditions necessary for cooperation ...
Human societies are unique in the level of cooperation among non-kin. Evolutionary models explaining...
Abstract. Humans contribute to a broad range of cooperative endeav-ors. In many of them, the amount ...
We study the evolution of cooperation in structured populations within popular models of social dile...
(INTRODUCTION) Human societies are characterised by high degrees of reciprocal altruism between unre...
<div><p>Mutualistic cooperation often requires multiple individuals to behave in a coordinated fashi...
Cooperation is essential in every society, but puzzling from an evolutionary perspective. Here, we d...
We study the evolution of cooperation in the spatial prisoner's dilemma game, where besides unc...
Whether by nature or nurture, humans often respond differently when facing the same situation. Yet, ...
In social evolution theory, unconditional cooperation has been seen as an evolutionarily unsuccessfu...
BACKGROUND: From the simplest living organisms to human societies, cooperation among individuals eme...
Abstract Background In recent years it has been found that the combination of evolutionary game theo...
Evolutionary game theory on spatial structures has received increasing attention during the past dec...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. There is evidence that individuals are oft...