reviewThe Quarterly Review of BiologyJun 1, 2004Closed access

The Evolution of Cooperation

The University of Texas at Austin

PubMed
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Abstract

Darwin recognized that natural selection could not favor a trait in one species solely for the benefit of another species. The modern, selfish-gene view of the world suggests that cooperation between individuals, whether of the same species or different species, should be especially vulnerable to the evolution of noncooperators. Yet, cooperation is prevalent in nature both within and between species. What special circumstances or mechanisms thus favor cooperation? Currently, evolutionary biology offers a set of disparate explanations, and a general framework for this breadth of models has not emerged. Here, we offer a tripartite structure that links previously disconnected views of cooperation. We distinguish…

Citation impact

1,114
total citations
FWCI
128.97
Percentile
100%
References
143
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Natural selection
  • Biology
  • Trait
  • Kin selection
  • Selection (genetic algorithm)
  • Action (physics)
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Darwin (ADL)
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