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Altruism A Simulated Investigation COM SCI 194 Honors Research Fall 2007 ~ Spring 2008 Alexander Liu and Eric Chang Professor Amit Sahai
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Why Study Altruism? First, a definition Existence in species both animal and human Impact on human society and culture Above all, it’s exciting!
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Previous Works Haystack model The evolution of altruism: Game theory …Fletcher & Zwick Usage of A-life to support evolutionary biology theories Avida
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Mathematical Models Price’s Equation “In other words, for b>a there may be a positive contribution to the average altruism as a result of a group growing due to its high number of altruists and this growth can offset in-group losses, especially if the variance of the in-group altruism is low. In order for this effect to be significant, there must be a spread in the average altruism of the groups.” Hamilton’s Rule r = the genetic relatedness B = the additional reproductive benefit C = the reproductive cost to the individual of performing the act.
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Our Scope Not about morality or conscientious intent… Origins and reason for persistence How does a gene that decreases the fitness of the individual get passed on through generations?
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Approach Advantages of virtual simulation Direct and fast Building our framework: eden.java Design parameters and requirements Limitations and caveats
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Our Own Little eden (.java) Overall description The world environment Food availability and resolution Reproduction Genetic variance through succeeding generations
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Base Experiment First in our “main line” of experiments Either completely altruistic or completely selfish Random movement Results Why?
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Variable Levels Altruism levels allowed to vary in increments of 0.1 between 0.0 and 1.0
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Modifications Food sharing between parent and child organism Same trait governs two behaviors
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Genes, not Numbers Instead of a sliding scale, behavior is governed by a gene-set Genes have a chance to turn on or off
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Extension and Comparison Problems with a small gene-set Effect of increasing the gene-set Comparison with the previous results
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Back to the Numbers Altruism levels allowed to vary between 0.00 and 1.00 in increments of 0.01
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Sexually Determined Altruism Regardless of starting conditions, the distribution always converges to a selfish result
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Selective Altruism In previous experiments, there is no clear advantage to being altruistic Test Condition: altruistic organisms only share with similarly altruistic neighbors Mutation rate: 20% chance of +- 0.1 Selective Range: Shares with altruists +- 0.05 range
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Altruism vs. Selfishness Revisited Hording Behavior Observed Population Distribution Snapshot at Equilibrium: Pure AltruisticPure Selfish –1.0: 0 72 –0.9:0 86 –0.8:4 79 –0.7:2 57 –0.6:15 67 –0.5:32 41 –0.4:59 10 –0.3:87 0 –0.2:65 1 –0.1:97 0 Equilibrium eventually breaks. Altruists exhibit much more robustness and consistent rebounding
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Conclusions Contingent upon several conditions –Conditional altruism –Relatedness and locality Beginnings- parent/child interaction Persistence –Altruists do benefit (each other) –Price Equation
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Distinctions Differences between altruism in animal species and in human society The importance of a persistent culture And transmission of cultural elements Genetic basis versus expression
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And… Final thoughts A big thank you Questions?
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