An evolutionary advantage of cooperation
Ole Peters, Alexander Adamou

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that cooperation provides an evolutionary advantage by reducing fluctuations in resource growth, thereby increasing the long-term growth rate of cooperating entities through a non-ergodic effect.
Contribution
It introduces a novel explanation for the evolution of cooperation based on multiplicative noise and non-ergodicity, independent of reciprocity or relatedness.
Findings
Cooperators experience higher long-term growth rates due to fluctuation reduction.
Pooling and sharing decrease the amplitude of resource fluctuations.
This mechanism explains cooperation in simple biological systems like early multicellularity.
Abstract
Cooperation is a persistent behavioral pattern of entities pooling and sharing resources. Its ubiquity in nature poses a conundrum. Whenever two entities cooperate, one must willingly relinquish something of value to the other. Why is this apparent altruism favored in evolution? Classical solutions assume a net fitness gain in a cooperative transaction which, through reciprocity or relatedness, finds its way back from recipient to donor. We seek the source of this fitness gain. Our analysis rests on the insight that evolutionary processes are typically multiplicative and noisy. Fluctuations have a net negative effect on the long-time growth rate of resources but no effect on the growth rate of their expectation value. This is an example of non-ergodicity. By reducing the amplitude of fluctuations, pooling and sharing increases the long-time growth rate for cooperating entities, meaning…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies
