Social Structure Facilitated the Evolution of Care-giving as a Strategy for Disease Control in the Human Lineage
Authored by Sharon E Kessler, Tyler R Bonnell, Joanna M Setchell, Colin A Chapman
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-31568-2
Sponsors:
EU Marie-Curie IRG
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Pseudocode
Model Code URLs:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-31568-2#Sec11
Abstract
Humans are the only species to have evolved cooperative care-giving as a
strategy for disease control. A synthesis of evidence from the fossil
record, paleogenomics, human ecology, and disease transmission models,
suggests that care-giving for the diseased evolved as part of the unique
suite of cognitive and socio-cultural specializations that are
attributed to the genus Homo. Here we demonstrate that the evolution of
hominin social structure enabled the evolution of care-giving for the
diseased. Using agent-based modeling, we simulate the evolution of
care-giving in hominin networks derived from a basal primate social
system and the three leading hypotheses of ancestral human social
organization, each of which would have had to deal with the elevated
disease spread associated with care-giving.We show that (1) care-giving
is an evolutionarily stable strategy in kin-based cooperatively breeding
groups, (2) care-giving can become established in small, low density
groups, similar to communities that existed before the increases in
community size and density that are associated with the advent of
agriculture in the Neolithic, and (3) once established, care-giving
became a successful method of disease control across social systems,
even as community sizes and densities increased. We conclude that
care-giving enabled hominins to suppress disease spread as social
complexity, and thus socially-transmitted disease risk, increased.
Tags
Management
Infection
Intelligence
Community
patterns
Diarrhea
Life
Admixture
Neanderthal
Antiquity