Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies

Human cooperation in large groups can emerge when help is channeled towards individuals with a good reputation of helping others. Evolutionary models suggest that, for reputation-based cooperation to be stable, the recipient’s reputation should not be based only on his past behavior (1st-order infor...

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Main Authors: Swakman, Violet, Molleman, Lucas, Ule, Aljaz, Egas, Martijn
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31124/
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author Swakman, Violet
Molleman, Lucas
Ule, Aljaz
Egas, Martijn
author_facet Swakman, Violet
Molleman, Lucas
Ule, Aljaz
Egas, Martijn
author_sort Swakman, Violet
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Human cooperation in large groups can emerge when help is channeled towards individuals with a good reputation of helping others. Evolutionary models suggest that, for reputation-based cooperation to be stable, the recipient’s reputation should not be based only on his past behavior (1st-order information) but also on the past behavior of the recipient’s recipient (2nd-order information). Second-order information reflects the context of others’ actions, and allows people to distinguish whether or not giving (or denying) help was justified. Little is known yet about how people actually condition their cooperation on 2nd-order information. With a behavioral experiment, we show that people actively seek 2nd -order information and take this into account in their own helping decisions. In an anonymous iterated helping game, donors learned if their recipients helped others in the past and could obtain 2nd-order information about these actions. Donors often requested this 2nd-order information and were especially interested to know why help was denied (i.e., defection). Justified defection was rewarded: help was generally directed towards those who defected against the selfish, and away from those who defected against helpful individuals. A detailed analysis of individual strategies reveals that many subjects based their decisions solely on 1st-order information about their recipients’ past behavior. However, a substantial fraction of subjects consistently considered also the 2nd-order information about their recipients’ behavior. Our results provide strong empirical support for the mechanisms that theoretically underpin reputation-based cooperation, and highlight pronounced individual variation in human cooperative strategies.
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spelling nottingham-311242020-05-04T17:21:23Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31124/ Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies Swakman, Violet Molleman, Lucas Ule, Aljaz Egas, Martijn Human cooperation in large groups can emerge when help is channeled towards individuals with a good reputation of helping others. Evolutionary models suggest that, for reputation-based cooperation to be stable, the recipient’s reputation should not be based only on his past behavior (1st-order information) but also on the past behavior of the recipient’s recipient (2nd-order information). Second-order information reflects the context of others’ actions, and allows people to distinguish whether or not giving (or denying) help was justified. Little is known yet about how people actually condition their cooperation on 2nd-order information. With a behavioral experiment, we show that people actively seek 2nd -order information and take this into account in their own helping decisions. In an anonymous iterated helping game, donors learned if their recipients helped others in the past and could obtain 2nd-order information about these actions. Donors often requested this 2nd-order information and were especially interested to know why help was denied (i.e., defection). Justified defection was rewarded: help was generally directed towards those who defected against the selfish, and away from those who defected against helpful individuals. A detailed analysis of individual strategies reveals that many subjects based their decisions solely on 1st-order information about their recipients’ past behavior. However, a substantial fraction of subjects consistently considered also the 2nd-order information about their recipients’ behavior. Our results provide strong empirical support for the mechanisms that theoretically underpin reputation-based cooperation, and highlight pronounced individual variation in human cooperative strategies. Elsevier 2015-11-30 Article PeerReviewed Swakman, Violet, Molleman, Lucas, Ule, Aljaz and Egas, Martijn (2015) Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies. Evolution and Human Behavior . ISSN 1090-5138 (In Press) Indirect Reciprocity Experiment Human Cooperation Individual Differences
spellingShingle Indirect Reciprocity
Experiment
Human Cooperation
Individual Differences
Swakman, Violet
Molleman, Lucas
Ule, Aljaz
Egas, Martijn
Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies
title Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies
title_full Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies
title_fullStr Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies
title_full_unstemmed Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies
title_short Reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies
title_sort reputation-based cooperation: empirical evidence for behavioral strategies
topic Indirect Reciprocity
Experiment
Human Cooperation
Individual Differences
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31124/