Group Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.

Group selection is an oft-cited but controversial explanation for the survival of altruism. Rather than enter this debate, this paper asks whether a group structure alone can provide a reasonable explanation for the survival of altruistic behaviour in an evolving population. If altruism (defined as...

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Autores principales: Cooper, B, Wallace, C
Formato: Journal article
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2004
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author Cooper, B
Wallace, C
author_facet Cooper, B
Wallace, C
author_sort Cooper, B
collection OXFORD
description Group selection is an oft-cited but controversial explanation for the survival of altruism. Rather than enter this debate, this paper asks whether a group structure alone can provide a reasonable explanation for the survival of altruistic behaviour in an evolving population. If altruism (defined as taking a cooperative action in a standard Prisoners' Dilemma) is to flourish, either groups need to be isolated from one another for multiple generations, or groups need to be constructed in a positively-assortative manner. Concentrating on the former case the paper shows that the size of the group, the relative benefit to cost of altruism and the number of generations in isolation all play a critical role. The smaller the group size, or the larger the benefit-to-cost ratio, the higher the survival chances of altruism. Additionally, for altruism to survive, the number of generations spent in isolated groups must be neither too big nor too small.
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spelling oxford-uuid:41ed0a94-3b97-48fe-8e00-b8d55b4abf5a2022-03-26T14:46:33ZGroup Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:41ed0a94-3b97-48fe-8e00-b8d55b4abf5aEnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrints2004Cooper, BWallace, CGroup selection is an oft-cited but controversial explanation for the survival of altruism. Rather than enter this debate, this paper asks whether a group structure alone can provide a reasonable explanation for the survival of altruistic behaviour in an evolving population. If altruism (defined as taking a cooperative action in a standard Prisoners' Dilemma) is to flourish, either groups need to be isolated from one another for multiple generations, or groups need to be constructed in a positively-assortative manner. Concentrating on the former case the paper shows that the size of the group, the relative benefit to cost of altruism and the number of generations in isolation all play a critical role. The smaller the group size, or the larger the benefit-to-cost ratio, the higher the survival chances of altruism. Additionally, for altruism to survive, the number of generations spent in isolated groups must be neither too big nor too small.
spellingShingle Cooper, B
Wallace, C
Group Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.
title Group Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.
title_full Group Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.
title_fullStr Group Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.
title_full_unstemmed Group Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.
title_short Group Selection and the Evolution of Altruism.
title_sort group selection and the evolution of altruism
work_keys_str_mv AT cooperb groupselectionandtheevolutionofaltruism
AT wallacec groupselectionandtheevolutionofaltruism