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Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation

Humans everywhere cooperate in groups to achieve benefits not attainable by individuals. Individual effort is often not automatically tied to a proportionate share of group benefits. This decoupling allows for free-riding, a strategy that (absent countermeasures) outcompetes cooperation. Empirically...

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Autores principales: Krasnow, Max M., Delton, Andrew W., Cosmides, Leda, Tooby, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4404356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25893241
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124561
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author Krasnow, Max M.
Delton, Andrew W.
Cosmides, Leda
Tooby, John
author_facet Krasnow, Max M.
Delton, Andrew W.
Cosmides, Leda
Tooby, John
author_sort Krasnow, Max M.
collection PubMed
description Humans everywhere cooperate in groups to achieve benefits not attainable by individuals. Individual effort is often not automatically tied to a proportionate share of group benefits. This decoupling allows for free-riding, a strategy that (absent countermeasures) outcompetes cooperation. Empirically and formally, punishment potentially solves the evolutionary puzzle of group cooperation. Nevertheless, standard analyses appear to show that punishment alone is insufficient, because second-order free riders (those who cooperate but do not punish) can be shown to outcompete punishers. Consequently, many have concluded that other processes, such as cultural or genetic group selection, are required. Here, we present a series of agent-based simulations that show that group cooperation sustained by punishment easily evolves by individual selection when you introduce into standard models more biologically plausible assumptions about the social ecology and psychology of ancestral humans. We relax three unrealistic assumptions of past models. First, past models assume all punishers must punish every act of free riding in their group. We instead allow punishment to be probabilistic, meaning punishers can evolve to only punish some free riders some of the time. This drastically lowers the cost of punishment as group size increases. Second, most models unrealistically do not allow punishment to recruit labor; punishment merely reduces the punished agent’s fitness. We instead realistically allow punished free riders to cooperate in the future to avoid punishment. Third, past models usually restrict agents to interact in a single group their entire lives. We instead introduce realistic social ecologies in which agents participate in multiple, partially overlapping groups. Because of this, punitive tendencies are more expressed and therefore more exposed to natural selection. These three moves toward greater model realism reveal that punishment and cooperation easily evolve by direct selection—even in sizeable groups.
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spelling pubmed-44043562015-05-02 Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation Krasnow, Max M. Delton, Andrew W. Cosmides, Leda Tooby, John PLoS One Research Article Humans everywhere cooperate in groups to achieve benefits not attainable by individuals. Individual effort is often not automatically tied to a proportionate share of group benefits. This decoupling allows for free-riding, a strategy that (absent countermeasures) outcompetes cooperation. Empirically and formally, punishment potentially solves the evolutionary puzzle of group cooperation. Nevertheless, standard analyses appear to show that punishment alone is insufficient, because second-order free riders (those who cooperate but do not punish) can be shown to outcompete punishers. Consequently, many have concluded that other processes, such as cultural or genetic group selection, are required. Here, we present a series of agent-based simulations that show that group cooperation sustained by punishment easily evolves by individual selection when you introduce into standard models more biologically plausible assumptions about the social ecology and psychology of ancestral humans. We relax three unrealistic assumptions of past models. First, past models assume all punishers must punish every act of free riding in their group. We instead allow punishment to be probabilistic, meaning punishers can evolve to only punish some free riders some of the time. This drastically lowers the cost of punishment as group size increases. Second, most models unrealistically do not allow punishment to recruit labor; punishment merely reduces the punished agent’s fitness. We instead realistically allow punished free riders to cooperate in the future to avoid punishment. Third, past models usually restrict agents to interact in a single group their entire lives. We instead introduce realistic social ecologies in which agents participate in multiple, partially overlapping groups. Because of this, punitive tendencies are more expressed and therefore more exposed to natural selection. These three moves toward greater model realism reveal that punishment and cooperation easily evolve by direct selection—even in sizeable groups. Public Library of Science 2015-04-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4404356/ /pubmed/25893241 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124561 Text en © 2015 Krasnow et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Krasnow, Max M.
Delton, Andrew W.
Cosmides, Leda
Tooby, John
Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation
title Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation
title_full Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation
title_fullStr Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation
title_full_unstemmed Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation
title_short Group Cooperation without Group Selection: Modest Punishment Can Recruit Much Cooperation
title_sort group cooperation without group selection: modest punishment can recruit much cooperation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4404356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25893241
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124561
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