The dynamics of Machiavellian intelligence
Sergey Gavrilets and Aaron Vose
Departments of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Mathematics, and
Computer Science, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996
Edited by Tomoko Ohta, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan,
and approved September 21, 2006 (received for review February 20, 2006)
The "Machiavellian intelligence" hypothesis (or the "social brain"
hypothesis) posits that large brains and distinctive cognitive
abilities of humans have evolved via intense social competition in
which social competitors developed increasingly sophisticated
"Machiavellian" strategies as a means to achieve higher social and
reproductive success. Here we build a mathematical model aiming to
explore this hypothesis. In the model, genes control brains which
invent and learn strategies (memes) which are used by males to gain
advantage in competition for mates. We show that the dynamics of
intelligence has three distinct phases. During the dormant phase only
newly invented memes are present in the population. During the
cognitive explosion phase the population's meme count and the learning
ability, cerebral capacity (controlling the number of different memes
that the brain can learn and use), and Machiavellian fitness of
individuals increase in a runaway fashion. During the saturation phase
natural selection resulting from the costs of having large brains
checks further increases in cognitive abilities. Overall, our results
suggest that the mechanisms underlying the "Machiavellian intelligence"
hypothesis can indeed result in the evolution of significant cognitive
abilities on the time scale of 10 to 20 thousand generations. We show
that cerebral capacity evolves faster and to a larger degree than
learning ability. Our model suggests that there may be a tendency
toward a reduction in cognitive abilities (driven by the costs of
having a large brain) as the reproductive advantage of having a large
brain decreases and the exposure to memes increases in modern societies.