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Social semantics: altruism, cooperation, mutualism, strong reciprocity and group selection

2006· review· en· 1,899 citations· W2124337033 on OpenAlex· 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2006.01258.x

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Opus teacher head0.054
GPT teacher head0.390
Teacher spread
0.336 · how far apart the two teachers sit on this one work
Validation status
score_only:v0-immature-baseline · verbatim from the scoring run: score_only means the number may rank works, and no category label ships from it

Abstract

From an evolutionary perspective, social behaviours are those which have fitness consequences for both the individual that performs the behaviour, and another individual. Over the last 43 years, a huge theoretical and empirical literature has developed on this topic. However, progress is often hindered by poor communication between scientists, with different people using the same term to mean different things, or different terms to mean the same thing. This can obscure what is biologically important, and what is not. The potential for such semantic confusion is greatest with interdisciplinary research. Our aim here is to address issues of semantic confusion that have arisen with research on the problem of cooperation. In particular, we: (i) discuss confusion over the terms kin selection, mutualism, mutual benefit, cooperation, altruism, reciprocal altruism, weak altruism, altruistic punishment, strong reciprocity, group selection and direct fitness; (ii) emphasize the need to distinguish between proximate (mechanism) and ultimate (survival value) explanations of behaviours. We draw examples from all areas, but especially recent work on humans and microbes.

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The record

Venue
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Topic
Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
Field
Social Sciences
Canadian institutions
Queen's University
Funders
Korea Institute of Energy Research
Keywords
BiologyMutualism (biology)Altruism (biology)Reciprocity (cultural anthropology)Kin selectionInclusive fitnessReciprocal altruismGroup selectionSelection (genetic algorithm)Social psychologyEvolutionary biologyEcologyPsychologyArtificial intelligence
Has abstract in OpenAlex
yes