Conradt L, Roper T J
School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QG, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2007 Sep 22;274(1623):2317-26. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2007.0186.
A 'consensus decision' is when the members of a group choose, collectively, between mutually exclusive actions. In humans, consensus decisions are often made democratically or in an 'equally shared' manner, i.e. all group members contribute to the decision. Biologists are only now realizing that shared consensus decisions also occur in social animals (other than eusocial insects). Sharing of decisions is, in principle, more profitable for groups than accepting the 'unshared' decision of a single dominant member. However, this is not true for all individual group members, posing a question as to how shared decision making could evolve. Here, we use a game theory model to show that sharing of decisions can evolve under a wide range of circumstances but especially in the following ones: when groups are heterogeneous in composition; when alternative decision outcomes differ in potential costs and these costs are large; when grouping benefits are marginal; or when groups are close to, or above, optimal size. Since these conditions are common in nature, it is easy to see how mechanisms for shared decision making could have arisen in a wide range of species, including early human ancestors.
“共识决策”是指一个群体的成员共同在相互排斥的行动之间做出选择。在人类中,共识决策通常以民主方式或以“平等共享”的方式做出,即所有群体成员都参与决策。生物学家直到现在才意识到,共享的共识决策也发生在社会性动物(除了群居昆虫)中。原则上,决策共享对群体来说比接受单个主导成员的“非共享”决策更有利可图。然而,并非所有个体群体成员都是如此,这就引发了一个问题,即共享决策是如何进化的。在这里,我们使用博弈论模型表明,决策共享可以在广泛的情况下进化,尤其是在以下情况下:当群体组成异质时;当替代决策结果的潜在成本不同且这些成本很大时;当群体利益微不足道时;或者当群体接近或超过最佳规模时。由于这些条件在自然界中很常见,很容易理解共享决策机制是如何在包括早期人类祖先在内的广泛物种中出现的。