Pain expressiveness and altruistic behavior: an exploration using agent-based modeling
Authored by Amanda C de C Williams, Elizabeth Gallagher, Antonio R Fidalgo, Peter J Bentley
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000443
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
http://links.lww.com/PAIN/A191
Abstract
Predictions which invoke evolutionary mechanisms are hard to test.
Agent-based modeling in artificial life offers a way to simulate
behaviors and interactions in specific physical or social environments
over many generations. The outcomes have implications for understanding
adaptive value of behaviors in context. Pain-related behavior in animals
is communicated to other animals that might protect or help, or might
exploit or predate. An agent-based model simulated the effects of
displaying or not displaying pain (expresser/nonexpresser strategies)
when injured and of helping, ignoring, or exploiting another in pain
(altruistic/nonaltruistic/selfish strategies). Agents modeled in MATLAB
interacted at random while foraging (gaining energy); random injury
interrupted foraging for a fixed time unless help from an altruistic
agent, who paid an energy cost, speeded recovery. Environmental and
social conditions also varied, and each model ran for 10,000 iterations.
Findings were meaningful in that, in general, contingencies that evident
from experimental work with a variety of mammals, over a few
interactions, were replicated in the agent-based model after selection
pressure over many generations. More energy-demanding expression of pain
reduced its frequency in successive generations, and increasing injury
frequency resulted in fewer expressers and altruists. Allowing
exploitation of injured agents decreased expression of pain to near
zero, but altruists remained. Decreasing costs or increasing benefits of
helping hardly changed its frequency, whereas increasing interaction
rate between injured agents and helpers diminished the benefits to both.
Agent-based modeling allows simulation of complex behaviors and
environmental pressures over evolutionary time.
Tags
Reciprocity
Evolutionary perspective
Rodents
Social modulation
Empathy
Threat
Injury
Sensitization
Plasticity
Consistent