698 research outputs found
The evolution of cooperation through institutional incentives and optional participation
Rewards and penalties are common practical tools that can be used to promote
cooperation in social institutions. The evolution of cooperation under reward
and punishment incentives in joint enterprises has been formalized and
investigated, mostly by using compulsory public good games. Recently, Sasaki et
al. (2012, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 109:1165-1169) considered optional
participation as well as institutional incentives and described how the
interplay between these mechanisms affects the evolution of cooperation in
public good games. Here, we present a full classification of these evolutionary
dynamics. Specifically, whenever penalties are large enough to cause the
bi-stability of both cooperation and defection in cases in which participation
in the public good game is compulsory, these penalties will ultimately result
in cooperation if participation in the public good game is optional. The global
stability of coercion-based cooperation in this optional case contrasts
strikingly with the bi-stability that is observed in the compulsory case. We
also argue that optional participation is not so effective at improving
cooperation under rewards.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
The evolution of cooperation by social exclusion
The exclusion of freeriders from common privileges or public acceptance is
widely found in the real world. Current models on the evolution of cooperation
with incentives mostly assume peer sanctioning, whereby a punisher imposes
penalties on freeriders at a cost to itself. It is well known that such costly
punishment has two substantial difficulties. First, a rare punishing cooperator
barely subverts the asocial society of freeriders, and second, natural
selection often eliminates punishing cooperators in the presence of
non-punishing cooperators (namely, "second-order" freeriders). We present a
game-theoretical model of social exclusion in which a punishing cooperator can
exclude freeriders from benefit sharing. We show that such social exclusion can
overcome the above-mentioned difficulties even if it is costly and stochastic.
The results do not require a genetic relationship, repeated interaction,
reputation, or group selection. Instead, only a limited number of freeriders
are required to prevent the second-order freeriders from eroding the social
immune system.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures, supplementary material (materials and methods,
and 6 supplementary figures
Cheating is evolutionarily assimilated with cooperation in the continuous snowdrift game
It is well known that in contrast to the Prisoner's Dilemma, the snowdrift
game can lead to a stable coexistence of cooperators and cheaters. Recent
theoretical evidence on the snowdrift game suggests that gradual evolution for
individuals choosing to contribute in continuous degrees can result in the
social diversification to a 100% contribution and 0% contribution through
so-called evolutionary branching. Until now, however, game-theoretical studies
have shed little light on the evolutionary dynamics and consequences of the
loss of diversity in strategy. Here we analyze continuous snowdrift games with
quadratic payoff functions in dimorphic populations. Subsequently, conditions
are clarified under which gradual evolution can lead a population consisting of
those with 100% contribution and those with 0% contribution to merge into one
species with an intermediate contribution level. The key finding is that the
continuous snowdrift game is more likely to lead to assimilation of different
cooperation levels rather than maintenance of diversity. Importantly, this
implies that allowing the gradual evolution of cooperative behavior can
facilitate social inequity aversion in joint ventures that otherwise could
cause conflicts that are based on commonly accepted notions of fairness.Comment: 30 pages, 3 tables, 5 figure
- …