Cooperation Flashcards

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1
Q

Reproduction Restraint

A

Adaptations that evolve because it increased the likelihood of survival for the population in bad times.

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2
Q

Evolutionary stable strategy (ESS)

A

Strategy, which, if adopted by the population in a given environment, cannot be invaded by an alternative strategy that is initially rare.

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3
Q

Kin selection

A

Evolutionary strategy that favours the reproductive success of an organism’s relatives, even at a cost to own reproduction and survival.

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4
Q

Hamilton’s rule

A

Kin selection causes genes to increase in frequency when the genetic relatedness of a recipient to an actor multiplied by the benefit to the recipient is greater than the reproductive cost to the actor (r*b>c).

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5
Q

Inclusive fitness

A

Ability of an individual organism to pass on its genes to the next generation, taking into account the shared genes passed on by the organism’s close relatives.

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6
Q

Alloparenting

A

An individual other than the biological parent of an offspring that performs the functions of a parent.

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7
Q

Cooperation

A

Action/process of working together to the same end.

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8
Q

Altruism

A

Selfless concern for the well-being of others-behavior that benefits others at costs for the actor.

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9
Q

Mutual-benefits behavior

A

Behavior that is beneficial both to the actor and the recipient (type of cooperation)

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10
Q

By-product benefits

A

Situations where the mutual benefit arises simply from every individual following its own immediate self-interest.

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11
Q

Direct reciprocity

A

We help individuals that helped us (=tit-for-tat)

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12
Q

Indirect reciprocity

A

Help is given to individuals based on their reputation, bad acts (such as not helping) reduce an individual’s reputation while good acts (such as helping) increase an individual’s reputation.

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13
Q

Green beard effect

A

Explanation of selective altruism among individuals of a species. Occurs when an allele produces 3 effects: a perceptible trait (the green beard), recognition of this trait by others, preferential treatment of individuals with the trait.

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14
Q

Eusociality

A

Highest level of organization of animal sociality, is defined by the following characteristics: cooperative brood care, overlapping generations within a colony of adults, and a division of labour into reproductive and non-reproductive groups.

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15
Q

Philopatry

A

Tendency of an organism to stay in or habitually return to a particular area.

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16
Q

Reproductive altruism

A

Behavior that increases other organisms’ fitness and permanently decreases the actor’s own fitness.

17
Q

Ultimate explanations

A

Why something occurs - “real” reason behind a behavior, concerned with the fitness consequences of a trait or behavior and whether it is (or is not) selected.

18
Q

Proximate explanations

A

How something occurs, concerned with the mechanisms that underpin the trait or behavior.

19
Q

Parochial altruism

A

Self-sacrifice to benefit our own group (“in-group love) and to hurt or sabotage out-groups (“out-group aggression”)

20
Q

Grudger

A

Always co-operates unless the other defects - then he only defects (he is pissed off)

21
Q

Tit-for-tat

A

“nice” strategy, is forgiving and allows cooperation again, retaliating, only copying and therefore cannot win, only tie or loose, just reacts to the previous action of the other (no past and no future matters)

22
Q

Tit-for-two tat

A

Forgiving tit-for-tat = 2 defections are required before the person using this strategy gets “pissed off” and defects as well

23
Q

Joss

A

Strategy that is basically tit-for-tat but sometimes tries defecting

24
Q

Tester

A

Strategy starts of coopearating and then defects to see what the opponent does and to find out their strategy.

25
Q

Network reciprocity

A

If a co-operator pays a cost,c, for each neighbor to receive a benefit,b, and defectors have no costs, and their neighbors receive no benefits, network reciprocity can favor cooperation. The benefit-to-cost ration must exceed the average number of people, k, per individual: b/c>k

26
Q

Group Selection

A

Multi-level selection = Selection on lower level (within groups) favors defectors, whereas selection on the higher level (between groups) favors co-operators, b/c>1+(n/m)

27
Q

Race encoding

A

Humans encode the race of each individual they encounter, which is caused by mechanisms that are automatic.

28
Q

Generous tit-for-tat

A

If the other cooperates, you cooperate - if the other doesn’t cooperate, you sometimes do not cooperate as well

29
Q

Stay-loose-shift

A

You keep your strategy as long as you win and if you lose, you change your strategy.

30
Q

Prisoner’s dilemma

A

Situation in which two players each have two options whose outcome depends crucially on the simultaneous choice made by the other, often formulated in terms of two prisoners separately deciding whether to confess to a crime.