论文标题

由于有益和昂贵的传染性,社会性的社会困境

Social dilemmas of sociality due to beneficial and costly contagion

论文作者

Cooney, Daniel B., Morris, Dylan H., Levin, Simon A., Rubenstein, Daniel I., Romanczuk, Pawel

论文摘要

自然界的社会水平差异很大。有些物种是孤独的;其他人生活在家庭群体中;有些形成复杂的多户社会。社交互动水平的提高可以允许有用的创新和有益信息的传播,但也可以促进有害侵染的传播,例如传染病。可以自然地假设这些传染性过程塑造了复杂的社会系统的演变,但是对传播施加的选择压力下的社会性动态的明确描述仍然难以捉摸。 我们考虑了在有益的和昂贵的传染性的情况下,社会策略演变的模型。我们研究了三个时标的该模型的动力学:使用易感感染感染感(SIS)模型来描述给定社会性策略的传染性传播,这是研究两个不同级别的社会性水平的不断变化的复制器方程,以及一种适应性动力学方法来研究社会人群水平的长期演化。 对于关于感染的收益和成本的广泛假设,我们确定了社会困难:进化稳定的社会性策略(ESS)与集体最佳级不同 - 对所有个人最适合所有个人的社会性水平。特别是,当良好的传染力分别(分别少于不良传染)比不良传染的范围更少(分别少)时,社会互动的ESS级别(分别少)比社会最优值更大。 我们的结果阐明了传染性如何塑造社会互动的演变,但揭示了进化可能不一定会导致人口进入对任何或全部有益的社会结构。

Levels of sociality in nature vary widely. Some species are solitary; others live in family groups; some form complex multi-family societies. Increased levels of social interaction can allow for the spread of useful innovations and beneficial information, but can also facilitate the spread of harmful contagions, such as infectious diseases. It is natural to assume that these contagion processes shape the evolution of complex social systems, but an explicit account of the dynamics of sociality under selection pressure imposed by contagion remains elusive. We consider a model for the evolution of sociality strategies in the presence of both a beneficial and costly contagion. We study the dynamics of this model at three timescales: using a susceptible-infectious-susceptible (SIS) model to describe contagion spread for given sociality strategies, a replicator equation to study the changing fractions of two different levels of sociality, and an adaptive dynamics approach to study the long-time evolution of the population level of sociality. For a wide range of assumptions about the benefits and costs of infection, we identify a social dilemma: the evolutionarily-stable sociality strategy (ESS) is distinct from the collective optimum -- the level of sociality that would be best for all individuals. In particular, the ESS level of social interaction is greater (respectively less) than the social optimum when the good contagion spreads more (respectively less) readily than the bad contagion. Our results shed light on how contagion shapes the evolution of social interaction, but reveals that evolution may not necessarily lead populations to social structures that are good for any or all.

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