Bshary Redouan, Raihani Nichola J
Institute of Biology, University of Neuchâtel, Emile-Argand 11, 2000 Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, 26 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AP, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2017 Sep 27;284(1863). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0929.
Humans are arguably unique in the extent and scale of cooperation with unrelated individuals. While pairwise interactions among non-relatives occur in some non-human species, there is scant evidence of the large-scale, often unconditional prosociality that characterizes human social behaviour. Consequently, one may ask whether research on cooperation in humans can offer general insights to researchers working on similar questions in non-human species, and whether research on humans should be published in biology journals. We contend that the answer to both of these questions is yes. Most importantly, social behaviour in humans and other species operates under the same evolutionary framework. Moreover, we highlight how an open dialogue between different fields can inspire studies on humans and non-human species, leading to novel approaches and insights. Biology journals should encourage these discussions rather than drawing artificial boundaries between disciplines. Shared current and future challenges are to study helping in ecologically relevant contexts in order to correctly interpret how payoff matrices translate into inclusive fitness, and to integrate mechanisms into the hitherto largely functional theory. We can and should study human cooperation within a comparative framework in order to gain a full understanding of the evolution of helping.
人类在与非亲属个体合作的范围和规模方面堪称独一无二。虽然在一些非人类物种中存在非亲属之间的两两互动,但几乎没有证据表明存在大规模的、通常是无条件的亲社会行为,而这种行为正是人类社会行为的特征。因此,人们可能会问,关于人类合作的研究能否为研究非人类物种类似问题的研究人员提供一般性见解,以及关于人类的研究是否应该发表在生物学杂志上。我们认为这两个问题的答案都是肯定的。最重要的是,人类和其他物种的社会行为在相同的进化框架下运作。此外,我们强调不同领域之间的开放对话如何能够激发对人类和非人类物种的研究,从而产生新的方法和见解。生物学杂志应该鼓励这些讨论,而不是在学科之间划定人为的界限。当前和未来共同面临的挑战是在生态相关背景下研究帮助行为,以便正确解释收益矩阵如何转化为广义适合度,并将机制整合到迄今为止主要是功能性的理论中。我们能够而且应该在比较框架内研究人类合作,以便全面理解帮助行为的进化。