4.6 Article

Evolution of revealing emotions

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.physa.2022.127268

Keywords

Evolutionary stability; Hiding strategy; Material payoffs; Observability of emotions; Revealing strategy; Subjective utilities

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This paper develops an evolutionary approach to investigate the evolution of revealing one's own emotions in humans through natural selection. The results reveal the survival and dynamics of revealing and hiding types under different strategic interaction conditions, as well as the linkage between revealing traits and other-regarding traits.
This paper develops an evolutionary approach to investigate whether revealing one's own emotions such as selfishness, altruism or envy has evolved in humans through a process of natural selection. This paper finds two results. First, if the revealing trait (revealing or hiding) and the other-regarding trait (selfish or altruistic/envious) are independent so the four types evolve in a correlated way, both of revealing types and hiding types can survive in the long run. For most parameter values, however, revealing altruism fares better than hiding altruism if individuals' interactions are strategic complements, whereas hiding envy fares better than revealing envy if individuals' interactions are strategic substitutes. Second, for most parameter values, only the revealing types survive if the revealing trait and the other-regarding trait are linked so that the four types evolve independently. (C) 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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