Behavioural Ecology, Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern, Wohlenstrasse 50a, CH-3032 Hinterkappelen, Switzerland.
Sci Rep. 2017 Mar 6;7:43867. doi: 10.1038/srep43867.
Cooperation by generalised reciprocity implies that individuals apply the decision rule "help anyone if helped by someone". This mechanism has been shown to generate evolutionarily stable levels of cooperation, but as yet it is unclear how widely this cooperation mechanism is applied among animals. Dogs (Canis familiaris) are highly social animals with considerable cognitive potential and the ability to differentiate between individual social partners. But although dogs can solve complex problems, they may use simple rules for behavioural decisions. Here we show that dogs trained in an instrumental cooperative task to provide food to a social partner help conspecifics more often after receiving help from a dog before. Remarkably, in so doing they show no distinction between partners that had helped them before and completely unfamiliar conspecifics. Apparently, dogs use the simple decision rule characterizing generalised reciprocity, although they are probably capable of using the more complex decision rule of direct reciprocity: "help someone who has helped you". However, generalized reciprocity involves lower information processing costs and is therefore a cheaper cooperation strategy. Our results imply that generalised reciprocity might be applied more commonly than direct reciprocity also in other mutually cooperating animals.
广义互惠合作意味着个体遵循“如果有人帮助过你,就去帮助任何人”的决策规则。这一机制已被证明能够产生稳定的合作水平,但目前尚不清楚这种合作机制在动物中被广泛应用的程度。狗(Canis familiaris)是高度社会化的动物,具有相当大的认知潜力和区分个体社交伙伴的能力。但是,尽管狗可以解决复杂的问题,但它们可能会在行为决策中使用简单的规则。在这里,我们展示了在一项工具性合作任务中受过训练的狗,在收到另一只狗的帮助后,会更频繁地向同类提供食物。值得注意的是,它们在这样做时,不会区分之前帮助过它们的伙伴和完全陌生的同类。显然,狗使用了广义互惠的简单决策规则,尽管它们可能有能力使用更复杂的直接互惠决策规则:“帮助帮助过你的人”。然而,广义互惠涉及的信息处理成本更低,因此是一种更廉价的合作策略。我们的研究结果表明,广义互惠可能比直接互惠在其他相互合作的动物中更为常见。