Being a leader or being the leader: The evolution of institutionalised hierarchy

Human social hierarchy has the unique characteristic of existing in two forms. Firstly, as an informal hierarchy where leaders and followers are implicitly defined by their personal characteristics, and secondly, as an institutional hierarchy where leaders and followers are explicitly appointed by group decision. Although both forms can reduce the time spent in organising collective tasks, institutional hierarchy imposes additional costs. It is therefore natural to question why it emerges at all. The key difference lies in the fact that institutions can create hierarchy with only a single leader, which is unlikely to occur in unregulated informal hierarchy. To investigate if this difference can affect group decision-making and explain the evolution of institutional hierarchy, we first build an opinion-formation model that simulates group decision making. We show that in comparison to informal hierarchy, a single-leader hierarchy reduces (i) the time a group spends to reach consensus, (ii) the variation in consensus time, and (iii) the rate of increase in consensus time as group size increases. We then use this model to simulate the cost of organising a collective action which produces resources, and integrate this into an evolutionary model where individuals can choose between informal or institutional hierarchy. Our results demonstrate that groups evolve preferences towards institutional hierarchy, despite the cost of creating an institution, as it provides a greater organisational advantage which is less affected by group size and inequality.

[1]  R. Calvert,et al.  Leadership and Its Basis in Problems of Social Coordination , 1992 .

[2]  O. J. Harvey,et al.  Intergroup Conflict And Cooperation: The Robbers Cave Experiment , 2013 .

[3]  Laurent Lehmann,et al.  An evolutionary model explaining the Neolithic transition from egalitarianism to leadership and despotism , 2014, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[4]  Allen Johnson,et al.  The evolution of human societies : from foraging group to agrarian state , 1988 .

[5]  Guillaume Deffuant,et al.  Mixing beliefs among interacting agents , 2000, Adv. Complex Syst..

[6]  Leonid Hurwicz,et al.  Institutions As Families Of Game Forms , 1996 .

[7]  Andrea Manica,et al.  Evolution of personality differences in leadership , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[8]  S. Fortunato,et al.  Statistical physics of social dynamics , 2007, 0710.3256.

[9]  M. Vugt,et al.  Naturally Selected: The Evolutionary Science of Leadership , 2011 .

[10]  T. Judge,et al.  Personality and leadership: a qualitative and quantitative review. , 2002, The Journal of applied psychology.

[11]  K. Foster,et al.  Diminishing returns in social evolution: the not‐so‐tragic commons , 2004, Journal of evolutionary biology.

[12]  E. Smith,et al.  The evolution of inequality , 2016, Evolutionary anthropology.

[13]  C. Ember Hierarchy in the Forest: The Evolution of Egalitarian Behavior , 2001 .

[14]  Emma Hart,et al.  Emergence of hierarchy from the evolution of individual influence in an agent-based model , 2017, ECAL.

[15]  Robin I. M. Dunbar Neocortex size as a constraint on group size in primates , 1992 .

[16]  Henrik Jordahl,et al.  The Looks of a Winner: Beauty, Gender and Electoral Success , 2006, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[17]  Barry S. Hewlett,et al.  Social learning among Congo Basin hunter–gatherers , 2011, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[18]  Elinor Ostrom,et al.  Governing the commons , 1990 .

[19]  Jeremy Auerbach,et al.  Convergence to consensus in heterogeneous groups and the emergence of informal leadership , 2016, Scientific Reports.

[20]  Paul L. Hooper,et al.  A theory of leadership in human cooperative groups. , 2010, Journal of theoretical biology.

[21]  S. Wright,et al.  Evolution in Mendelian Populations. , 1931, Genetics.

[22]  C. D. Pielstick Formal vs. Informal Leading: A Comparative Analysis , 2000 .

[23]  Jean-Pierre Bocquet-Appel,et al.  When the World’s Population Took Off: The Springboard of the Neolithic Demographic Transition , 2011, Science.

[24]  Gregory A. Johnson Organizational Structure and Scalar Stress , 2003 .