cooperators
Cooperators are individuals, organizations, or species that engage in cooperative behavior—acting to increase the welfare of others or the group, sometimes at a personal cost. In biology, cooperation is widespread, from sterile worker ants to microbial mutualisms and parental care in mammals. Evolutionary explanations include kin selection, direct reciprocity, indirect reciprocity, and, in some models, group selection. In humans, cooperation underpins teamwork, institutions, and many economic arrangements; it can be voluntary (volunteer work, joint projects) or formal (cooperatives, public-private partnerships).
Game theory uses the term cooperator to describe an agent who chooses to cooperate in dilemmas such
Cooperators may rely on norms, social sanctions, and institutions to sustain cooperative behavior, particularly in large
Cooperative behavior is studied across disciplines, including biology, economics, sociology, and political science. Related concepts include