Behavioural Ecology Division, Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Bern, Switzerland.
BMC Evol Biol. 2012 Mar 29;12:41. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-12-41.
Although evolutionary models of cooperation build on the intuition that costs of the donor and benefits to the receiver are the most general fundamental parameters, it is largely unknown how they affect the decision of animals to cooperate with an unrelated social partner. Here we test experimentally whether costs to the donor and need of the receiver decide about the amount of help provided by unrelated rats in an iterated prisoner's dilemma game.
Fourteen unrelated Norway rats were alternately presented to a cooperative or defective partner for whom they could provide food via a mechanical apparatus. Direct costs for this task and the need of the receiver were manipulated in two separate experiments. Rats provided more food to cooperative partners than to defectors (direct reciprocity). The propensity to discriminate between helpful and non-helpful social partners was contingent on costs: An experimentally increased resistance in one Newton steps to pull food for the social partner reduced the help provided to defectors more strongly than the help returned to cooperators. Furthermore, test rats provided more help to hungry receivers that were light or in poor condition, which might suggest empathy, whereas this relationship was inverse when experimental partners were satiated.
In a prisoner's dilemma situation rats seem to take effect of own costs and potential benefits to a receiver when deciding about helping a social partner, which confirms the predictions of reciprocal cooperation. Thus, factors that had been believed to be largely confined to human social behaviour apparently influence the behaviour of other social animals as well, despite widespread scepticism. Therefore our results shed new light on the biological basis of reciprocity.
尽管合作的进化模型基于这样一种直觉,即捐赠者的成本和接受者的收益是最普遍的基本参数,但它们如何影响动物与无关社交伙伴合作的决策在很大程度上仍是未知的。在这里,我们通过实验测试了无关大鼠在反复囚徒困境游戏中提供帮助的数量是否取决于捐赠者的成本和接受者的需求。
14 只无关的挪威鼠被轮流呈现给一个合作或有缺陷的伙伴,它们可以通过机械装置为其提供食物。在两个单独的实验中操纵了这项任务的直接成本和接受者的需求。与破坏者相比,老鼠为合作伙伴提供了更多的食物(直接互惠)。对有益和无益的社交伙伴进行区分的倾向取决于成本:实验中增加一个牛顿的阻力来为社交伙伴拉食物,会比帮助合作者更强烈地减少对破坏者的帮助。此外,受试老鼠会为饥饿的、体重轻或身体状况不佳的接受者提供更多的帮助,这可能表明它们有同理心,而当实验伙伴吃饱时,这种关系则相反。
在囚徒困境的情况下,当决定帮助社交伙伴时,老鼠似乎会考虑到自身的成本和对接受者的潜在收益,这证实了互惠合作的预测。因此,尽管人们普遍持怀疑态度,但那些被认为在很大程度上局限于人类社会行为的因素显然也会影响其他社会动物的行为。因此,我们的研究结果为互惠的生物学基础提供了新的认识。