Habit queues determined by genetic genes

According to the July 9 report in British " Daily Mail " magazine, the British have a habit of polite traditions, in public places queuing up for tickets, buying goods or queuing for cars . they are very common voluntarily.

However, according to the latest research results by scientists, queuing behavior is not only a polite expression, but also a human instinct, determined by genetic genes . In our natural world, some animals also have queuing instincts.

Picture 1 of Habit queues determined by genetic genes

World's No. 1 British queuing habit (Photo: Mydrivers)

Andrew Colman, a professor of psychology at the University of Leicester in England, points out that humans are not the only animals that can line up, some animals also instinctively line up, like Antarctic penguins. They usually line up in pairs. There are penguins that have to stay at home to hatch eggs, some have to go looking for food, but when going out to get food, they must comply with external rules, such as queuing. Only by cooperating, finding new food without starvation, all such acts are instinctive reactions.

Humans are high-class animals, can be discussed and arranged in order to create regulatory documents, so that people comply with queuing rules, while animals are just queuing by instinct " In fact, there are many animals in evolution that have formed a habit of queuing. This means there is a DNA part like us, from which there are similar behaviors. copper . "

Picture 2 of Habit queues determined by genetic genes

Penguins also line up (Photo: Treehugger)

To present the queuing behavior as an evolutionary result of animal evolution, the researchers wrote a computer software that simulates the evolution of animal evolution. The results of simulation studies show that, with time, the need of survival, natural animals form the habit of queuing, and genetics over generations . The results of this research will be addressed in the journal "Evolutionary Ecology Research" (Evolutionary Ecology Research).

Andrew Colman believes that human queuing habits are also determined by genetic factors. He said: " For people, the situation is more complex, because we know how to think and exchange, but this is not really our queuing behavior is not influenced by instinct ."