The behavioural ecology of personality: consistent individual differences from an adaptive perspective
University of Cambridge · Institut de Biologia Evolutiva
Abstract
Abstract Individual humans, and members of diverse other species, show consistent differences in aggressiveness, shyness, sociability and activity. Such intraspecific differences in behaviour have been widely assumed to be non‐adaptive variation surrounding (possibly) adaptive population‐average behaviour. Nevertheless, in keeping with recent calls to apply Darwinian reasoning to ever‐finer scales of biological variation, we sketch the fundamentals of an adaptive theory of consistent individual differences in behaviour. Our thesis is based on the notion that such ‘personality differences’ can be selected for if fitness payoffs are dependent on both the frequencies with which competing strategies are played and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 66.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 52
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Trait
- Ecology
- Personality
- Variation (astronomy)
- Perspective (graphical)
- Intraspecific competition
- Evolutionary ecology
- Trait theory
- Life in Land