The Evolution of Covert Signaling
暂无分享,去创建一个
[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.