Title :
Cooperation Achieved by Migration and Evolution in a Multilevel Selection Context
Author :
Ichinose, Genki ; Arita, Takaya
Author_Institution :
Graduate Sch. of Inf. Sci., Nagoya Univ.
Abstract :
The idea that natural selection can be meaningfully applied at the group level may be more important than previously thought. This perspective, a modern version of group selection, is called multilevel selection. Multilevel selection theory could incorporate previous explanations for the evolution of cooperation including kin selection. There is general agreement that natural selection favors noncooperators over cooperators in the case of an unstructured population. Therefore, the evolution of cooperation by multilevel selection often requires positive assortment between cooperators and noncooperators. The question is how this positive assortment can arise. We constructed an individual-based model of multilevel selection and introduced migration and evolution. The results showed that positive assortment was generated especially when a migration strategy was adopted in which individuals respond specifically to bad environmental conditions. It was also shown that the evolution could further facilitate positive assortment by working with migration. The fact that cooperation was achieved by such migration and by evolution highlights the importance of sensitiveness to the environment and of fluctuations in group size, respectively
Keywords :
biology; evolution (biological); cooperators; evolution; group selection; individual-based model; kin selection; migration; multilevel selection context; natural selection; noncooperators; Animals; Biological system modeling; Costs; Evolution (biology); Fluctuations; Genetics; Humans; Information science; Sampling methods; Viscosity;
Conference_Titel :
Artificial Life, 2007. ALIFE '07. IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0701-X
DOI :
10.1109/ALIFE.2007.367802