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Rademacher Complexity and Models of Group Competition

12 days ago
  • #evolutionary biology
  • #Rademacher Complexity
  • #group selection
  • Rademacher Complexity and mean field approximations are applied to kin and group selection models in evolutionary biology.
  • Group selection theory is presented as a mean field approximation, simplifying complex interactions by averaging effects.
  • Kin selection theory, formalized by Hamilton's Rule (rB > C), explains altruism through genetic relatedness and cost-benefit analysis.
  • Nowak, Tarnita, and Wilson (NTW) argue that kin selection is limited and propose group selection as an alternative model.
  • Mean field theories in physics, like those by Curie and Weiss, inspired NTW's approach by averaging interactions in complex systems.
  • NTW's model treats worker ants as 'robots' of the queen, ignoring individual interactions for colony-level dynamics.
  • Rademacher Complexity measures model richness, comparing how well kin and group selection models generalize beyond training data.
  • Group selection models show lower Rademacher Complexity for group dynamics, while kin selection models excel in individual interactions.
  • Competition between groups fosters cooperation within groups, aligning individual incentives with collective success.
  • The essay concludes that kin and group selection are complementary, each useful at different scales of biological and social organization.