PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers find selfishness can sometimes help the common good

2010-09-15
(Press-News.org) Scientists have overturned the conventional wisdom that cooperation is essential for the well-being of the whole population, finding evidence that slackers can sometimes help the common good. Researchers, from Imperial College London, the Universities of Bath and Oxford, University College London and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology studied populations of yeast and found that a mixture of 'co-operators' and 'cheats' grew faster than a more utopian one of only "co-operators." The study, publishing next week in the online, open access journal PLoS Biology, used both laboratory experiments and a mathematical model to understand why and how a little "selfishness" can benefit the whole population.

In the study, the "co-operator" yeast produce a protein called invertase that breaks down sugar (sucrose) to give food (glucose) that is available to the rest of the population. The "cheats" eat the broken down sugar but don't make invertase themselves, and so save their energy.

Professor Laurence Hurst, Royal Society-Wolfson Research Merit Award Holder at the University of Bath, explained: "We found that yeast used sugar more efficiently when it was scarce, and so having 'cheats' in the population stopped the yeast from wasting their food. Secondly we found that because yeast cannot tell how much sucrose is available to be broken down, they waste energy making invertase even after there is no sugar left. This puts a brake on population growth. But if most of the population are 'co-operators' and the remainder are 'cheats,' not all of the population is wasting their energy and limiting growth. For these effects to matter, we found that 'co-operators' needed to be next to other 'co-operators' so they get more of the glucose they produce. If any of these three conditions were changed, the 'cheats' no longer benefitted the population."

Dr. Ivana Gudelj, NERC Advanced Fellow and Lecturer in Applied Mathematics at Imperial College London added: "Our work illustrates that the commonly used language of 'co-operators' and 'cheats' could in fact obscure the reality. When the addition of more invertase producers reduces the fitness of all, it is hard to see invertase production as co-operation, even if it behaves in a more classical co-operative manner, benefitting all, when rare."

The researchers suggest similar situations may exist in other species where 'cheats' help rather than hinder the population.

INFORMATION: Funding: This work is funded by the Royal Society, Conacyt, NERC. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Competing interests statement: The authors declare that no competing interests exist.

Citation: MacLean RC, Fuentes-Hernandez A, Greig D, Hurst LD, Gudelj I (2010) A Mixture of ''Cheats'' and ''Co-Operators'' Can Enable Maximal Group Benefit. PLoS Biol 8(9): e1000486. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000486

PLEASE ADD THE LINK TO THE PUBLISHED ARTICLE IN ONLINE VERSIONS OF YOUR REPORT: http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.1000486

PRESS ONLY PREVIEW OF THE ARTICLE: http://www.plos.org/press/plbi-08-09-Hurst.pdf

RELATED SYNOPSIS: http://www.plos.org/press/plbi-08-09-HurstSynopsis.pdf

CONTACT:
Vicky Just
University of Bath Press Office
+44 (0)1225 386 883
+44 (0)7966 341 357
vjj21@bath.ac.uk


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Combined impact of lifestyle factors on mortality among Chinese women

2010-09-15
In research published this week in PLoS Medicine, results from the Shanghai Women's Health Study reveal the impact of lifestyle-related factors on mortality in a cohort of Chinese women – confirming the results from other Western research studies. The large prospective cohort study by Wei Zheng and colleagues (from Vanderbilt University & Shanghai Cancer Institute) showed that lifestyle factors other than active smoking and alcohol consumption, have a major combined impact on total mortality on a scale comparable to the effect of smoking. For example healthier lifestyle-related ...

Specialist health journalists write better news stories

2010-09-15
David Henry from the University of Toronto and colleagues analysed Australian news stories over a five-year period, and examined whether experienced specialist health reporters write better stories than other categories of journalists. They found that it does matter who writes news stories that cover the benefits and harms of health care interventions: stories written by specialist health journalists working for a single media outlet were of higher quality than those written by less experienced writers. The authors say their findings are important because "this source of ...

The 'urban advantage' in health care is more complex than it seems

2010-09-15
Amos Channon from the University of Southampton, United Kingdom and colleagues outline the complexities of urban advantage in maternal health where the urban poor often have worse access to health care than women in rural areas. They used improved methods to measure urban poverty in 30 countries, and found substantial inequalities in maternal and newborn health, and in access to health care. The authors outline two main patterns of urban inequality in developing countries, and offer recommendations for improving access to care. INFORMATION: Funding: No funding was received ...

Burnout associated with self-reported unprofessional conduct among medical students

2010-09-15
Medical students with higher levels of distress (burnout) were more likely to self-report unprofessional conduct related to patient care and less altruistic professional values, according to a study in the September 15 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on medical education. "Professionalism is a core competency for all physicians. Professionalism includes being honest, acting with integrity, advocating for the needs of patients, reducing barriers to equitable health care, and adhering to an ethical code of conduct," the authors write. "Despite the widely acknowledged importance ...

Depressed medical students more likely to associate stigma with depression

2010-09-15
Medical students with moderate to severe depression more frequently endorsed several depression stigma attitudes than nondepressed students and had a higher rate of suicidal thoughts, according to a study in the September 15 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on medical education. "Medical students experience depression, burnout, and mental illness at a higher rate than the general population, with mental health deteriorating over the course of medical training. Medical students have a higher risk of suicidal ideation and suicide, higher rates of burnout, and a lower quality ...

Educational intervention may help medical students adapt care for patients needing nonstandard care

2010-09-15
Fourth-year medical students who participated in an educational intervention were more likely to seek, identify and incorporate into care patient circumstances that may require variation from standard care, compared to students in a control group, according to a study in the September 15 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on medical education. "Clinical decision making requires 2 distinct skills: classifying patients' conditions into diagnostic and management categories that permit the application of best-evidence guidelines, and individualizing or contextualizing care for ...

Personal sacrifices, rationalization may play role for physicians who accept gifts from industry

2010-09-15
Sunita Sah, M.B.Ch.B., B.Sc., M.B.A., M.S., and George Loewenstein, Ph.D., of Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, conducted a study to determine whether reminding resident physicians of the sacrifices made to obtain training, as well as suggesting this as a potential rationalization, increases self-stated willingness to accept gifts from industry. In a study that included a survey of 301 U.S. resident physicians, the researchers found that "reminding physicians of sacrifices made in obtaining their education resulted in gifts being evaluated as more acceptable: 21.7 ...

Structured re-analysis of case findings may help improve diagnostic accuracy

2010-09-15
Silvia Mamede, M.D., Ph.D., of Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands and colleagues investigated whether recent experience with clinical problems provokes availability bias (overestimation of the likelihood of a diagnosis based on the ease with which it comes to mind) resulting in diagnostic errors and whether reflection (structured reanalysis of the case findings) counteracts this bias. The researchers conducted a study in 2009 with 18 first-year and 18 second-year internal medicine residents and found that "the availability bias may occur in medical diagnosis ...

Lower admission scores, non-white race/ethnicity may increase chance of withdrawal from medical school

2010-09-15
Dorothy A. Andriole, M.D., and Donna B. Jeffe, Ph.D., of Washington University, St. Louis, conducted a study to identify demographic variables prior to medical school acceptance associated with outcomes for medical school students. The study used data from a 1994-1999 national cohort of 97,445 students accepted to medical school who were followed up through March 2009 and had graduated, withdrawn, or were dismissed. The authors found that "lower scores on the Medical College Admission Test, nonwhite race/ethnicity, and premedical debt of at least $50,000 were independently ...

Clerkship order linked with outcomes on clerkship subject exams, grades, not clinical performance

2010-09-15
Susan M. Kies, Ed.D., of the University of Illinois College of Medicine, Urbana, and colleagues conducted a study to assess whether the order in which third-year core clerkships are completed affects student performance. Anecdotal experience has suggested that third-year medical students whose first clerkship is internal medicine may have superior performance throughout the academic year. The researchers reviewed the clerkship performance records of medical students at all four campuses of the University of Illinois College of Medicine who completed their third-year core ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Breathing disruptions during sleep widespread in newborns with severe spina bifida

Whales may divide resources to co-exist under pressures from climate change

Why wetland restoration needs citizens on the ground

Sharktober: Study links October shark bite spike to tiger shark reproduction

PPPL launches STELLAR-AI platform to accelerate fusion energy research

Breakthrough in development of reliable satellite-based positioning for dense urban areas

DNA-templated method opens new frontiers in synthesizing amorphous silver nanostructures

Stress-testing AI vision systems: Rethinking how adversarial images are generated

Why a crowded office can be the loneliest place on earth

Choosing the right biochar can lock toxic cadmium in soil, study finds

Desperate race to resurrect newly-named zombie tree

New study links combination of hormone therapy and tirzepatide to greater weight loss after menopause

How molecules move in extreme water environments depends on their shape

Early-life exposure to a common pollutant harms fish development across generations

How is your corn growing? Aerial surveillance provides answers

Center for BrainHealth launches Fourth Annual BrainHealth Week in 2026

Why some messages are more convincing than others

National Foundation for Cancer Research CEO Sujuan Ba Named One of OncoDaily’s 100 Most Influential Oncology CEOs of 2025

New analysis disputes historic earthquake, tsunami and death toll on Greek island

Drexel study finds early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language

Study finds Alzheimer's disease can be evaluated with brain stimulation

Cells that are not our own may unlock secrets about our health

Caring Cross and Boston Children’s Hospital collaborate to expand access to gene therapy for sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia

Mount Sinai review maps the path forward for cancer vaccines, highlighting promise of personalized and combination approaches

Illinois study: How a potential antibiotics ban could affect apple growers

UC Irvine and Jefferson Health researchers find differences between two causes of heart valve narrowing

Ancien DNA pushes back record of treponemal disease-causing bacteria by 3,000 years

Human penis size influences female attraction and male assessment of rivals

Scientists devise way to track space junk as it falls to earth

AI is already writing almost one-third of new software code

[Press-News.org] Researchers find selfishness can sometimes help the common good