The Evolution of Covert Signaling

Human sociality depends upon the benefits of mutual aid and extensive communication. However, diverse norms and preferences complicate mutual aid, and ambiguity in meaning hinders communication. Here we demonstrate that these two problems can work together to enhance cooperation through the strategic use of deliberately ambiguous signals: covert signaling. Covert signaling is the transmission of information that is accurately received by its intended audience but obscured when perceived by others. Such signals may allow coordination and enhanced cooperation while also avoiding the alienation or hostile reactions of individuals with different preferences. Although the empirical literature has identified potential mechanisms of covert signaling, such as encryption in humor, there is to date no formal theory of its dynamics. We introduce a novel mathematical model to assess when a covert signaling strategy will evolve, as well as how receiver attitudes coevolve with covert signals. Covert signaling plausibly serves an important function in facilitating within-group cooperative assortment by allowing individuals to pair up with similar group members when possible and to get along with dissimilar ones when necessary. This mechanism has broad implications for theories of signaling and cooperation, humor, social identity, political psychology, and the evolution of human cultural complexity.

[1]  R. Mace,et al.  A phylogenetic approach to cultural evolution. , 2005, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[2]  Daniel J. Hruschka,et al.  Friendship: Development, Ecology, and Evolution of a Relationship , 2010 .

[3]  Allen Johnson,et al.  The Evolution of Human Societies: From Foraging Group to Agrarian State , 1988 .

[4]  Paul E. Smaldino,et al.  Social conformity despite individual preferences for distinctiveness , 2014, Royal Society Open Science.

[5]  G. Fine,et al.  Humor and Laughter: An Anthropological Approach , 1985 .

[6]  D. Nettle Social Markers and the Evolution of Reciprocal Exchange , 1997, Current Anthropology.

[7]  Lu Hong,et al.  Groups of diverse problem solvers can outperform groups of high-ability problem solvers. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[8]  C. Athena Aktipis,et al.  The animal nature of spontaneous human laughter , 2014 .

[9]  Ross A. Hammond,et al.  The Evolution of Ethnocentrism , 2006 .

[10]  Ian F. Haney-López Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class , 2014 .

[11]  Steven Pinker,et al.  The logic of indirect speech , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[12]  Andreas Wimmer,et al.  Ethnic Boundary Making: Institutions, Power, Networks , 2013 .

[13]  H. Kaufmann Similarity and cooperation received as determinants of cooperation rendered , 1967 .

[14]  B. Calcott,et al.  The other cooperation problem: generating benefit , 2008 .

[15]  P. Smaldino The cultural evolution of emergent group-level traits , 2014, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[16]  M. Moffett Human Identity and the Evolution of Societies , 2013, Human Nature.

[17]  Kathleen Searles Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism & Wrecked the Middle Class , 2016 .

[18]  Thomas J. Flamson,et al.  Encryption and laughter in social interaction , 2013 .

[19]  T. Schelling The Strategy of Conflict , 1963 .

[20]  Robert van Rooij,et al.  The Stag Hunt and the Evolution of Social Structure , 2007, Stud Logica.

[21]  E. Ostrom Collective action and the evolution of social norms , 2000, Journal of Economic Perspectives.

[22]  Carlos Santana,et al.  Ambiguity in Cooperative Signaling , 2014, Philosophy of Science.

[23]  B. Skyrms The Stag Hunt and the Evolution of Social Structure , 2003 .

[24]  M. Bartolomei,et al.  An anthropological view , 2019, The Social Consequences of Facial Disfigurement.

[25]  Michael Tomasello,et al.  Reply to comments. Two Key Steps in the Evolution of Human Cooperation: The Interdependence Hypothesis , 2012 .

[26]  E. Eisenberg Ambiguity as strategy in organizational communication , 1984 .

[27]  J. Vigil Political leanings vary with facial expression processing and psychosocial functioning , 2010 .

[28]  R. Kurzban,et al.  Covert Sexual Signaling: Human Flirtation and Implications for other Social Species , 2014, Evolutionary psychology : an international journal of evolutionary approaches to psychology and behavior.

[29]  Paul E Smaldino Social identity and cooperation in cultural evolution , 2019, Behavioural Processes.

[30]  Thomas J. Flamson,et al.  Journal of Evolutionary Psychology, 6(2008)4, 261–281 DOI: 10.1556/JEP.6.2008.4.2 THE ENCRYPTION THEORY OF HUMOR: A KNOWLEDGE-BASED MECHANISM OF HONEST SIGNALING , 2022 .

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

[32]  Peter J. Richerson,et al.  The Evolution of Norms: An Anthropological View , 2001 .

[33]  I. Fischer Friend or foe: subjective expected relative similarity as a determinant of cooperation. , 2009, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[34]  R. Mcelreath,et al.  Shared Norms and the Evolution of Ethnic Markers , 2003, Current Anthropology.

[35]  Chip Heath,et al.  Who Drives Divergence? Identity-Signaling, Outgroup Dissimilarity, and the Abandonment of Cultural Tastes , 2008, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[36]  E. Fehr,et al.  The Coevolution of Cultural Groups and Ingroup Favoritism , 2008, Science.

[37]  R. Wolosin,et al.  Cognitive similarity and group laughter , 1975 .

[38]  Zvika Neeman,et al.  Strategic Ambiguity in Electoral Competition , 2000 .

[39]  R. Mcelreath,et al.  Sustainability of minority culture when inter-ethnic interaction is profitable , 2018, Nature Human Behaviour.

[40]  A. Heifetz Rational Ritual: Culture, Coordination, and Common Knowledge. , 2004 .

[41]  Paul E. Smaldino,et al.  Adoption as a social marker: Innovation diffusion with outgroup aversion , 2015 .

[42]  Martin A. Nowak,et al.  Evolution of cooperation by phenotypic similarity , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[43]  Michael Tomasello,et al.  Two Key Steps in the Evolution of Human Cooperation , 2012, Current Anthropology.

[44]  P. Smaldino The Evolution of the Social Self: Multidimensionality of Social Identity Solves the Coordination Problems of a Society , 2015 .

[45]  M. Toro,et al.  Mutual benefit cooperation and ethnic cultural diversity. , 2007, Theoretical population biology.

[46]  V. Yzerbyt,et al.  Bulletin Personality and Social Psychology Holding a Mirror up to the Self : Egocentric Similarity Beliefs Underlie Social Projection in Cooperation on Behalf Of: Society for Personality and Social Psychology , 2022 .

[47]  A. Grafen Natural selection, kin selection and group selection [Polistes fuscatus, wasps] , 1984 .

[48]  R. Boyd,et al.  On Modeling Cognition and Culture: Why cultural evolution does not require replication of representations , 2002 .

[49]  Thomas J. Flamson,et al.  Signals of humor: Encryption and laughter in social interaction , 2013 .

[50]  D. Haun,et al.  The development of tag-based cooperation via a socially acquired trait , 2013 .

[51]  Kevin B Smith,et al.  Disgust, politics, and responses to threat , 2014, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.