Fr. 126.00

Cooperation and Conflict - The Interaction of Opposites in Shaping Social Behavior

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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Experts from biology to political science explore the interaction between cooperation and conflict at multiple levels.

List of contents










Introduction. Understanding for relationship between cooperation and conflict Walter Wilczynski and Sarah Brosnan; Part I. Broad Insights from Political Science to Molecular Behaviour: 1. Reconciliation and civil wars reconsidered William J. Long; 2. Internalizing cooperative norms in group-structured populations Erol Akçay and Jeremy Van Cleve; 3. Reputation: a fundamental route to human cooperation Junhui Wu, Daniel Balliet and Paul A. M. Van Lange; 4. Finding the right balance: cooperation and conflict in nature Elizabeth A. Ostrowski; Part II. Neural Mechanisms: 5. Social living and rethinking the concept of 'prosociality' Heather K. Caldwell and H. Elliott Albers; 6. The role of the temporal lobe in human social cognition Katherine L. Bryant, Christina N. Rogers Flattery and Matthias Schurz; 7. Role of oxytocin and vasopressin V1a receptor variation on personality, social behavior, social cognition, and the brain in nonhuman primates with a specific emphasis in chimpanzees William D. Hopkins and Robert D. Latzman; Part III. Species Comparisons: 8. Understanding the trade-off between cooperation and conflict in avian societies Amanda R. Ridley and Martha J. Nelson-Flower; 9. Cooperation and conflict in mutualisms with a special emphasis on marine cleaning interaction Redouan Bshary; 10. Frenemies: the interplay between cooperation and conflict in the evolution and function of insect societies Clare C. Rittschof and Christina M. Grozinger; Index.

About the author

Walter Wilczynski is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Neuroscience Institute at Georgia State University (GSU), USA. With over forty years of teaching and research experience, his work focuses on the study of the neural origins of social behaviour in animals, with particular interest in communication, behavioural endocrinology, comparative vertebrate neuroanatomy and sensory processing.Sarah F. Brosnan is Distinguished University Professor of Psychology, Philosophy and Neuroscience and co-Director of the Language Research Center, Georgia State University (GSU), USA. She studies decision-making in humans and other primates, particularly those relating to cooperation and inequity, and how these decision processes evolved. The editors have collaborated closely for several years on the Center for Behavioural Neuroscience's (GSU) research into the neurobiology of cooperative behaviour.

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