Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villages

The relative importance of social evolution theories such as kin selection, direct reciprocity and need-based transfers in explaining real-world cooperation is the source of much debate. Previous field studies of cooperation in human communities have revealed variability in the extent to which each...

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Main Authors: Matthew Gwynfryn Thomas, Ting Ji, Jiajia Wu, QiaoQiao He, Yi Tao, Ruth Mace
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2018-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.171535
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spelling doaj-6a42e888ddee42f6b9d5e421b9449d2c2020-11-25T03:43:55ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032018-01-015210.1098/rsos.171535171535Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villagesMatthew Gwynfryn ThomasTing JiJiajia WuQiaoQiao HeYi TaoRuth MaceThe relative importance of social evolution theories such as kin selection, direct reciprocity and need-based transfers in explaining real-world cooperation is the source of much debate. Previous field studies of cooperation in human communities have revealed variability in the extent to which each of these theories explains human sociality in different contexts. We conducted multivariate social network analyses predicting costly cooperation—labouring on another household's farm—in 128 082 dyads of Mosuo farming households in southwest China. Through information-theoretic model selection, we tested the roles played by genealogical relatedness, affinal relationships (including reproductive partners), reciprocity, relative need, wealth, household size, spatial proximity and gift-giving in an economic game. The best-fitting model included all factors, along with interactions between relatedness and (i) reciprocity, (ii) need, (iii) the presence of own children in another household and (iv) proximity. Our results show how a real-world form of cooperation was driven by kinship. Households tended to help kin in need (but not needy non-kin) and travel further to help spatially distant relatives. Households were more likely to establish reciprocal relationships with distant relatives and non-kin but closer kin cooperated regardless of reciprocity. These patterns of kin-driven cooperation show the importance of inclusive fitness in understanding human social behaviour.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.171535reciprocal altruismfarmerskin selectionchina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew Gwynfryn Thomas
Ting Ji
Jiajia Wu
QiaoQiao He
Yi Tao
Ruth Mace
spellingShingle Matthew Gwynfryn Thomas
Ting Ji
Jiajia Wu
QiaoQiao He
Yi Tao
Ruth Mace
Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villages
Royal Society Open Science
reciprocal altruism
farmers
kin selection
china
author_facet Matthew Gwynfryn Thomas
Ting Ji
Jiajia Wu
QiaoQiao He
Yi Tao
Ruth Mace
author_sort Matthew Gwynfryn Thomas
title Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villages
title_short Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villages
title_full Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villages
title_fullStr Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villages
title_full_unstemmed Kinship underlies costly cooperation in Mosuo villages
title_sort kinship underlies costly cooperation in mosuo villages
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The relative importance of social evolution theories such as kin selection, direct reciprocity and need-based transfers in explaining real-world cooperation is the source of much debate. Previous field studies of cooperation in human communities have revealed variability in the extent to which each of these theories explains human sociality in different contexts. We conducted multivariate social network analyses predicting costly cooperation—labouring on another household's farm—in 128 082 dyads of Mosuo farming households in southwest China. Through information-theoretic model selection, we tested the roles played by genealogical relatedness, affinal relationships (including reproductive partners), reciprocity, relative need, wealth, household size, spatial proximity and gift-giving in an economic game. The best-fitting model included all factors, along with interactions between relatedness and (i) reciprocity, (ii) need, (iii) the presence of own children in another household and (iv) proximity. Our results show how a real-world form of cooperation was driven by kinship. Households tended to help kin in need (but not needy non-kin) and travel further to help spatially distant relatives. Households were more likely to establish reciprocal relationships with distant relatives and non-kin but closer kin cooperated regardless of reciprocity. These patterns of kin-driven cooperation show the importance of inclusive fitness in understanding human social behaviour.
topic reciprocal altruism
farmers
kin selection
china
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.171535
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AT tingji kinshipunderliescostlycooperationinmosuovillages
AT jiajiawu kinshipunderliescostlycooperationinmosuovillages
AT qiaoqiaohe kinshipunderliescostlycooperationinmosuovillages
AT yitao kinshipunderliescostlycooperationinmosuovillages
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