RT Journal Article T1 Social dynamics and cooperation: The case of nonhuman primates and its implications for human behavior. A1 Cronin, Katherine A. A1 Sánchez, Angel AB The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the potential to explain much of the variation in cooperative behavior observed in the natural world. We show here that certain dimensions of the social environment, namely the size of the social group, the degree of social tolerance expressed, the structure of the dominance hierarchy, and the patterns of dispersal, may influence the emergence and stability of cooperation in predictable ways. Furthermore, the social environment experienced by a species over evolutionary time will have shaped their cognition to provide certain strengths and strategies that are beneficial in their species' social world. These cognitive adaptations will in turn impact the likelihood of cooperating in a given social environment. Experiments with one primate species, the cottontop tamarin, illustrate how social dynamics may influence emergence and stability of cooperative behavior in this species. We then take a more general viewpoint and argue that the hypotheses presented here require further experimental work and the addition of quantitative modeling to obtain a better understanding of how social dynamics influence the emergence and stability of cooperative behavior in complex systems. We conclude by pointing out subsequent specific directions for models and experiments that will allow relevant advances in the understanding of the emergence of cooperation. PB World Scientific Publishing Company SN 0219-5259 YR 2012 FD 2012-06 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10016/21302 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10016/21302 LA eng NO Ángel Sánchez was partially supported by Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spain) through grants MOSAICO, PRODIEVO and Complexity-NET RESINEE, and by Comunidad de Madrid (Spain) through grant MODELICO-CM. DS e-Archivo RD 19 may. 2024