Recent paper on #sharedintentionality and the developmental niche in #humanevolution.
As the major #threshold of specifically human #prosociality this looks into socio and environmental causes rather than genetic variants. Good sign!
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10539-024-09969-7

Thresholds of human cooperation: constructing the developmental niche of shared intentionality - Biology & Philosophy
Shared intentionality is key for understanding human cooperation and cognition. This paper proposes a new way of looking at shared intentionality as a set of interconnected threshold traits, highlighting the role of developmental niche construction in its evolution. This perspective suggests that shared intentionality may have arisen from environmental changes and interactions influencing existing traits, rather than genetic variation for novel cognitive machinery.
SpringerLink
Differences in the Social Motivations and Emotions of Humans and Other Great Apes - Human Nature
Humans share with other mammals and primates many social motivations and emotions, but they are also much more cooperative than even their closest primate relatives. Here I review recent comparative experiments and analyses that illustrate humans’ species-typical social motivations and emotions for cooperation in comparison with those of other great apes. These may be classified most generally as (i) ‘you > me’ (e.g., prosocial sympathy, informative and pedagogical motives in communication); (ii) ‘you = me’ (e.g., feelings of mutual respect, fairness, resentment); (iii) ‘we > me’ (e.g., feelings of obligation and guilt); and (iv) ‘WE (in the group) > me’ (e.g., in-group loyalty and conformity to norms, shame, and many in-group biases). The existence of these species-typical and species-universal motivations and emotions provides compelling evidence for the importance of cooperative activities in the human species.
SpringerLinkI really learnt a lot from this recent review paper about collaboration in other animals
How animals collaborate: Underlying proximate mechanisms by Shona Duguid and Alicia Melis in WIREs Cognitive Science
https://wires.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/wcs.1529
#apes #collaboration #comparativepsychology #cooperation #socialcognition #sharedintentionality