The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations

<p>Social interaction is crucial for social animals to thrive, but it comes with both benefits and costs. The social network approach helps to identify how social processes like cooperation are influenced by individual and population-level characteristics. Factors like individual recognition,...

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Hlavní autor: Gokcekus, S
Další autoři: Sheldon, B
Médium: Diplomová práce
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: 2023
Témata:
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author Gokcekus, S
author2 Sheldon, B
author_facet Sheldon, B
Gokcekus, S
author_sort Gokcekus, S
collection OXFORD
description <p>Social interaction is crucial for social animals to thrive, but it comes with both benefits and costs. The social network approach helps to identify how social processes like cooperation are influenced by individual and population-level characteristics. Factors like individual recognition, familiarity, and social stability play a role in promoting tolerance and cooperation; and understanding these factors can provide insights into how social networks, cooperation, and other social behaviors evolve in different species. In this thesis, I examine how social processes interact with spatial and temporal factors to influence fitness and other outcomes in wild birds (<i>Paridae</i>).</p> <p>I begin by establishing a theoretical foundation for my work by reviewing the concepts of cooperation and individual recognition and how they can be better understood through a social network approach (Chapters 2 & 3). Using experimental data, I explore the processes that may impact cooperative behavior by examining leading behavior during mixed-species foraging (Chapter 4) and demonstrate that motivation and dominance, as well as spatio- temporal effects, are determinants of this behavior. Drawing on these insights, I then use long-term breeding data to show that familiarity among neighbors as well as familiarity within breeding pairs influences fitness (Chapter 5). I also demonstrate that different kinds of social relationships have different effects on reproductive outcomes (Chapter 6).</p> <p>All in all, I demonstrate that social connections have implications for fitness, and highlight the importance of accounting for spatial, temporal, and cognitive components when studying the ecology and evolution of sociality.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:b24c4eb8-0fc4-45d8-929d-e82b627ac51a2023-10-24T09:09:38ZThe maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populationsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:b24c4eb8-0fc4-45d8-929d-e82b627ac51aEcologyCooperationSocial networksEvolutionEnglishHyrax Deposit2023Gokcekus, SSheldon, BFirth, JCole, ERegan, CAlbery, GLamers, KGreen, JTibbets, E<p>Social interaction is crucial for social animals to thrive, but it comes with both benefits and costs. The social network approach helps to identify how social processes like cooperation are influenced by individual and population-level characteristics. Factors like individual recognition, familiarity, and social stability play a role in promoting tolerance and cooperation; and understanding these factors can provide insights into how social networks, cooperation, and other social behaviors evolve in different species. In this thesis, I examine how social processes interact with spatial and temporal factors to influence fitness and other outcomes in wild birds (<i>Paridae</i>).</p> <p>I begin by establishing a theoretical foundation for my work by reviewing the concepts of cooperation and individual recognition and how they can be better understood through a social network approach (Chapters 2 & 3). Using experimental data, I explore the processes that may impact cooperative behavior by examining leading behavior during mixed-species foraging (Chapter 4) and demonstrate that motivation and dominance, as well as spatio- temporal effects, are determinants of this behavior. Drawing on these insights, I then use long-term breeding data to show that familiarity among neighbors as well as familiarity within breeding pairs influences fitness (Chapter 5). I also demonstrate that different kinds of social relationships have different effects on reproductive outcomes (Chapter 6).</p> <p>All in all, I demonstrate that social connections have implications for fitness, and highlight the importance of accounting for spatial, temporal, and cognitive components when studying the ecology and evolution of sociality.</p>
spellingShingle Ecology
Cooperation
Social networks
Evolution
Gokcekus, S
The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
title The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
title_full The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
title_fullStr The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
title_full_unstemmed The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
title_short The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
title_sort maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
topic Ecology
Cooperation
Social networks
Evolution
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