The following pages link to On the use of the Price equation (Q2196899):
Displaying 21 items.
- Understanding microbial cooperation (Q289422) (← links)
- Group selection and inclusive fitness are \textit{not} equivalent; the price equation vs. models and statistics (Q289433) (← links)
- Games among relatives revisited (Q738199) (← links)
- Group selection, kin selection, altruism and cooperation: when inclusive fitness is right and when it can be wrong (Q1624456) (← links)
- Change and maintenance of variation in quantitative traits in the context of the Price equation (Q1628715) (← links)
- The paradox of cooperation benefits (Q1716214) (← links)
- A mathematical formalism for natural selection with arbitrary spatial and genetic structure (Q1731952) (← links)
- Defining fitness in an uncertain world (Q1741901) (← links)
- Fisher's fundamental theorem of natural selection, dynamic sufficiency, and the necessity of higher moments (Q1752404) (← links)
- Subsistence of sib altruism in different mating systems and Haldane's arithmetic (Q2105502) (← links)
- Why kin and group selection models may not be enough to explain human other-regarding behaviour (Q2201956) (← links)
- Hamilton's missing link (Q2210087) (← links)
- In love and war: altruism, norm formation, and two different types of group selection (Q2216367) (← links)
- Natural selection in compartmentalized environment with reshuffling (Q2330619) (← links)
- Biological fitness and the price equation in class-structured populations (Q2351121) (← links)
- The replicator dynamics with \(n\) players and population structure (Q2413812) (← links)
- Measures of success in a class of evolutionary models with fixed population size and structure (Q2436595) (← links)
- A unifying framework reveals key properties of multilevel selection (Q2632390) (← links)
- Continuous-time models of group selection, and the dynamical insufficiency of kin selection models (Q2632746) (← links)
- Queller's rule ok: Comment on van Veelen ``When inclusive fitness is right and when it can be wrong'' (Q5963471) (← links)
- A rule is not a rule if it changes from case to case (A reply to Marshall's comment) (Q5963472) (← links)