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1 and within-group cooperation (e.g. parochial altruism).
2 ew that competition puts any such demands on altruism.
3 sufficient for the evolution of one form of altruism.
4 onsumption of a common resource is a form of altruism.
5 r selfishness help to "pay" for second-order altruism.
6 than others, a situation called competitive altruism.
7 nd recipient for explaining the evolution of altruism.
8 e punisher, making it a form of second-order altruism.
9 us action performance predicts self-reported altruism.
10 e punisher, making it a form of second-order altruism.
11 wo alleles which code for different kinds of altruism.
12 n alternative route towards the evolution of altruism.
13 m interspersed with phases of transient true altruism.
14 mpetition could account for the evolution of altruism.
15 are highly unstable, leading to the loss of altruism.
16 encouraging the origin and stability of true altruism.
17 the system towards the point of 50% marginal altruism.
18 y different perspectives on the evolution of altruism.
19 relationship between sexual reproduction and altruism.
20 relationship between sexual reproduction and altruism.
21 are motivated more by self-interest than by altruism.
22 l infinite models) plays in the evolution of altruism.
23 lassic "haystack" models of the evolution of altruism.
24 ups contribute to research solely because of altruism.
25 n relatives can counteract kin selection for altruism.
26 d in terms of extended kinship or reciprocal altruism.
27 upport the selection of both weak and strong altruism.
28 ffects can cancel, limiting the viability of altruism.
29 tly responding quantitatively to a partner's altruism.
30 on need to be interpreted solely in terms of altruism.
31 table component of the immune system and kin altruism.
32 relatedness), group selection and reciprocal altruism.
33 hypothesized to be an important precursor to altruism.
34 at a cost to themselves, a phenomenon termed altruism.
35 threat (the COVID-19 pandemic) and everyday altruism.
36 s and cultural context in the development of altruism.
37 es several novel insights into the nature of altruism.
38 s been described in terms of cooperation and altruism.
39 urrounding explanations for the evolution of altruism.
40 le of the neuropeptide oxytocin in promoting altruism.
41 sibility of a neural basis for extraordinary altruism.
42 eciprocal activity yielded little subsequent altruism.
43 is applied to model the real motivations of altruism.
44 close kin but share a "greenbeard" gene for altruism?
45 Does empathy necessarily impede equity in altruism?
46 ress of self and others to real-world costly altruism, (2) reinforce distinctions between empathy for
51 nces in the social preferences that motivate altruism across the primate order, and there is currentl
52 ection can favor reproductive altruism if an altruism allele aids copies of itself by helping relativ
53 fies the degree of an agent's selfishness or altruism, allowing us to better predict how the agent wi
60 cial behaviors such as extraordinary acts of altruism and aggression can often be best understood as
66 els of the gene-culture coevolution of human altruism and further sharpen what any theory of human co
67 pactful papers published on the evolution of altruism and identify 43 evolutionary models in which al
70 e of cooperative agreements, from reciprocal altruism and insurance arrangements to the social norms
73 sness was inversely predictive of children's altruism and positively correlated with their punitive t
76 nstitutions of integration can unleash human altruism and restore cooperation in the presence of dive
80 eories on the explanation of both biological altruism and sex-ratio conflicts, and defend that the en
82 Humans are a cooperative species, capable of altruism and the creation of shared norms that ensure fa
83 sults imply high context modularity of human altruism and the development of intervention approaches
84 y highlighting the relevance of pathological altruism and the neuroendocrine pathways associated with
87 owever, organ donation is a process based on altruism and trust, not a simple biological phenomenon.
91 cussion of the connection between other-only altruism and whole-group altruism, in which the donor ga
92 relatedness predisposes individuals towards altruism, and as haploid germ cells of an ejaculate will
93 dual-level ones, need not produce behavioral altruism, and do not require competition between groups
94 as political mobilization, health practices, altruism, and emotional states exhibit similar dynamics
96 cision on a choice between self-interest and altruism, and if improving this sensitivity through trai
98 , exhibit stronger conspiracy beliefs, lower altruism, and limited environmental knowledge, are more
99 enefit from medical improvement, feelings of altruism, and maintenance of hope, the chance of cure or
100 structure for the maintenance of mutualism, altruism, and niche construction or ecosystem engineerin
101 n ambivalent about their values (protection, altruism, and respect) and the deceased's wishes, not wa
102 t, often taken as evidence of uniquely human altruism, and show that it 1) disappears when cooperatio
103 m benefits the group, selfishness undermines altruism, and the purpose of the model is to identify me
104 METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In our AlAn's (altruism-antisocial) game a computer program presents su
105 eard effect and find that if recognition and altruism are always inherited together, the dynamics are
106 despite the fact that virtually all forms of altruism are associated with tradeoffs--some of enormous
107 ve been proposed to explain the evolution of altruism are direct reciprocity and indirect reciprocity
108 related individuals so that the benefits of altruism are reaped by copies of the altruistic gene in
109 (Figure 1), and kin selection and reciprocal altruism are the foundation of the kinds of cooperative
110 cial interactions, including cooperation and altruism, are characteristic of numerous species, but ma
111 ong evolutionary trajectories, and find that altruism arises before directly beneficial behavior, des
113 enomena, chiefly the evolution of biological altruism as that found in sterile castes of eusocial ins
114 netically based variation in selfishness and altruism, as in man, altruists with an innate ability to
115 t to the system's evolved functions: sibling altruism, aversion to personally engaging in sibling inc
117 of competition, selection will often favour altruism because its alternatives provide lower fitness.
118 In the typical evolutionary formulation, altruism benefits the group, selfishness undermines altr
120 ed oxytocin system activity induces a social altruism bias at the cost of ecological responsibility.
123 despite fear), and adaptive social behavior (altruism, bonding, and teamwork) were found to be releva
124 ial insect colonies are pinnacles of evolved altruism but also exhibit dramatic conflict among relati
125 sity of the population slows up selection of altruism, but does not affect its direction, and this ho
126 mportant mechanism favoring the evolution of altruism, but punishment can be costly to the punisher,
127 uently relied on kin selection or reciprocal altruism, but recent models suggest that guarding may be
128 e hypothalamic peptide oxytocin in promoting altruism, but whether the influence of oxytocin benefits
129 of individual and contextual differences in altruism by examining altruistic choices in different in
130 This effect both supports the evolution of altruism by focusing the altruists' gifts on relatives o
131 provide a new perspective on strong vs. weak altruism by identifying their different underlying game
133 conditions associated with outgroup-directed altruism by showing that charitable social cues co-occur
134 In a brood from a single egg, reproductive altruism by soldiers reflects clone-level allocation to
135 uestions about the proximate source of human altruism by suggesting that prosocial behavior results,
136 on amongst defectors nevertheless undermines altruism, by facilitating invasion of unrelated benefici
137 cartoonish thought experiment to explain why altruism can be a selfish strategy from the perspective
138 viduals are genetically related, alleles for altruism can be favored by selection because they are ca
139 en helped by the beneficiary, discriminating altruism can be resistant against invasion by defectors.
141 m, the model shows that both strong and weak altruism can evolve in periodically formed random groups
143 We show how kin selection and reciprocal altruism can promote cooperation in diverse 2x2 matrix g
146 olving an absolute cost to altruists (strong altruism) cannot evolve when populations are structured
147 ow religion negatively influences children's altruism, challenging the view that religiosity facilita
151 tress, we examined whether stress effects on altruism depend on participants' general capacity to men
154 s the essential factors for the evolution of altruism directly in its parameters and integrates impor
162 and identify 43 evolutionary models in which altruism evolves and where the authors attribute the evo
165 support decisions about trust, reciprocity, altruism, fairness, revenge, social punishment, social n
166 rlapping generations hinder the evolution of altruism, fecundity effects are more conducive to altrui
167 iprocal interactions are a potent trigger of altruism for young children, and that these interactions
171 l design allows us to rigorously distinguish altruism from preferences regarding equality-efficiency
175 Efforts to solve the evolutionary puzzle of altruism have a lengthy history, and recent years have s
176 number of supposedly alternative pathways to altruism have been published, leading to controversies s
177 However, the potential hurtful aspects of altruism have gone largely unrecognized in scientific in
178 al decades of investigating the evolution to altruism have resulted in the systematic and unwitting r
179 as been used extensively to study reciprocal altruism, here we show that the n-player prisoner's dile
180 rom the novel formulation to prevent 'forced altruism' hidden in previous static algorithms while all
181 owever, in conditions that do not select for altruism, host bacteria promoting transfer are outcompet
183 ate mechanism to underlie so-called directed altruism, i.e., altruism in response to anothers's pain,
186 indirect fitness options and helping is only altruism if it reduces the helper's direct fitness.
187 reciprocal activity elicited high degrees of altruism in 1- and 2-y-old children, whereas friendly bu
189 o far, and I apply the theory of competitive altruism in arguing how strategic investment in behaviou
191 further our understanding of the origins of altruism in humans by highlighting the importance of emo
192 eted theoretical results on the selection of altruism in inelastic viscous homogeneous populations, n
195 selection theory predicts that the degree of altruism in queenless colonies should be reduced because
196 underlie so-called directed altruism, i.e., altruism in response to anothers's pain, need, or distre
197 tions meet the most stringent definitions of altruism in that they represent an intentional behavior
198 st defectors presents relative advantages to altruism in the simplest games between altruists and def
201 fications of pathological altruism, that is, altruism in which attempts to promote the welfare of oth
202 of Hamilton's rule in the case of other-only altruism in which the benefits are shared by other membe
203 d, providing field evidence for 'competitive altruism' in which helpful acts are used as a display to
206 between other-only altruism and whole-group altruism, in which the donor gains some benefit from its
207 other prominent theories of the evolution of altruism: inclusive fitness and multilevel selection.
213 is caused by loosely coupled separate genes, altruism is facilitated through beard chromodynamics in
218 enome sequencing reveals that this bacterial altruism is made possible by drug-resistance mutations u
223 e for charitable contributions, called "pure altruism," is satisfied by increases in the public good
224 ding to evolutionary theories of generalized altruism, market integration should lead to greater leve
225 In the absence of kin selection, reciprocal altruism may be an evolutionarily stable strategy but is
227 ltruist, and also limits the extent to which altruism may emerge by exposing clusters of altruists to
228 riodically and randomly formed suggests that altruism may evolve more readily and in simpler organism
229 support prior suggestions that self-reported altruism may not reliably predict altruistic behaviour.
234 that if punishing inequity is predictive of altruism more broadly, extraordinary altruists should pu
235 aggregate of scores from Ego-Resiliency, NEO Altruism, NEO Straightforwardness (positive predictors)
239 parents, who had higher levels of trust and altruism, perceived the potential for enhanced care, ref
241 ons suggest that enforcement of reproductive altruism (policing) in hymenopteran insect societies is
244 explanations and models for cooperation and altruism--reciprocity, kin and group selection, and puni
245 Although the neural mechanisms underlying altruism remain unknown, empathy and its component abili
247 teria to humans: Is the evolution of extreme altruism, represented by the sterile workers of social i
249 ved a great deal of attention with regard to altruism, reproductive value has been surprisingly negle
251 h as cooperation, giving, and other forms of altruism--result from covert attempts to avoid social in
253 used to model Herbert Simon's explanation of altruism, showing that altruistic norms can "hitchhike"
254 origin of the genetic basis for reproductive altruism (somatic cells specialized at vegetative functi
256 selective pressures leading to reproductive altruism stem from the increasing cost of reproduction w
257 test case was based on the "biofilms promote altruism" study previously implemented in BacSim because
258 for altruistic sterility is favored when the altruism sufficiently benefits relatives carrying the ge
259 al responsibility emphasize the relevance of altruism, suggesting that more altruistic individuals ar
260 h other individuals carrying the alleles for altruism than random individuals in the population ("kin
261 ism, fecundity effects are more conducive to altruism than survival effects, and one demographic regi
262 to a stranger is a rare act of extraordinary altruism that appears to reflect a moral commitment to h
263 and potential ramifications of pathological altruism, that is, altruism in which attempts to promote
264 ndependently inherited loci, one controlling altruism the other discrimination, or a one locus model
265 range of puzzling behaviors, such as extreme altruism, the use of ethical principles, and romantic lo
266 hoices, we considered participants' level of altruism, their reciprocity expectations, their optimism
268 ral network positively reinforces reciprocal altruism, thereby motivating subjects to resist the temp
269 After a brief exploration on the basis of altruism, this review will discuss the assessment, evalu
271 where the authors attribute the evolution of altruism to a pathway other than kin selection and/or de
272 the positive assortment necessary for strong altruism to evolve does not require these additional mec
273 it defectors against each other allow strong altruism to evolve even in populations with negligible k
275 that spermatozoa may display cooperation and altruism to gain an advantage when inter-male sperm comp
277 lution of all forms of social behavior, from altruism to spite, across all organisms, from viruses to
278 should consider kin selection and reciprocal altruism together rather than as alternatives, and they
282 not affect its direction, and this holds for altruism towards any individual, not just immediate neig
284 wever, paradoxes arise when organisms divert altruism towards more distantly related recipients.
285 ble signals, signal recognition ability, and altruism towards others that display the same signal.
293 aphic regime (so-called death-birth) permits altruism whereas another (so-called birth-death) does no
294 e reciprocal cues remain potent elicitors of altruism, whereas a fourth study with preschoolers showe
295 n and obtain conditions for the stability of altruism which differ from Hamilton's rule by simply rep
296 neural bases of this unique aspect of human altruism, which extends beyond interpersonal interaction
297 y phenomena of human interactions: authentic altruism, why people cooperate intuitively, one-shot coo
298 udy is best described as egoistically biased altruism, with important implications for our understand
299 group formation, the origin of reproductive altruism within the group, and the further specializatio