Does cooperation require both reciprocity and alike neighbours?
June 08, 2012
Evolution by definition is cold and merciless: it selects for
success and weeds out failure. It seems only natural to expect that such
a process would simply favour genes that help themselves and not
others. Yet cooperative behaviour can be observed in many areas, and
humans helping each other are a common phenomenon. Thus, one of the
major questions in science today is how cooperative behaviour could
evolve. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Biology
in Plön, Harvard University, and the University of Amsterdam have now
developed a new model combining two possible explanations - direct
reciprocity and population structure - and found that both repetition
and structured population are essential for the evolution of
cooperation. The researchers conclude that human societies can best
achieve high levels of cooperative behaviour if their individuals
interact repeatedly, and if populations exhibit at least a minor degree
of structure.
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