2024-03-19T04:58:14Zhttps://riubu.ubu.es/oai/requestoai:riubu.ubu.es:10259/44082022-11-29T12:39:03Zcom_10259_3830com_10259_5086com_10259_2604col_10259_3832
Pereda, María
Zurro, Débora
Santos Martín, José Ignacio
Briz i Godino, Ivan
Álvarez, Myrian
Caro Saiz, Jorge
Galán Ordax, José Manuel
2017-04-06T09:11:25Z
2017-04-06T09:11:25Z
2017-03
2045-2322
http://hdl.handle.net/10259/4408
We study the influence that resource availability has on cooperation in the context of hunter-gatherer
societies. This paper proposes a model based on archaeological and ethnographic research on resource
stress episodes, which exposes three different cooperative regimes according to the relationship
between resource availability in the environment and population size. The most interesting regime
represents moderate survival stress in which individuals coordinate in an evolutionary way to increase
the probabilities of survival and reduce the risk of failing to meet the minimum needs for survival.
Populations self-organise in an indirect reciprocity system in which the norm that emerges is to share
the part of the resource that is not strictly necessary for survival, thereby collectively lowering the
chances of starving. Our findings shed further light on the emergence and evolution of cooperation in
hunter-gatherer societies.
eng
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Attribution 4.0 International
Emergence and Evolution of Cooperation Under Resource Pressure
info:eu-repo/semantics/article