Title of article
Friendship, cliquishness, and the emergence of cooperation
Author/Authors
Hruschka، نويسنده , , Daniel J. and Henrich، نويسنده , , Joseph، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
15
From page
1
To page
15
Abstract
The evolution of cooperation is a central problem in biology and the social sciences. While theoretical work using the iterated prisonerʹs dilemma (IPD) has shown that cooperation among non-kin can be sustained among reciprocal strategies (i.e. tit-for-tat), these results are sensitive to errors in strategy execution, cyclical invasions by free riders, and the specific ecology of strategies. Moreover, the IPD assumes that a strategyʹs probability of playing the PD game with other individuals is independent of the decisions made by others. Here, we remove the assumption of independent pairing by studying a more plausible cooperative dilemma in which players can preferentially interact with a limited set of known partners and also deploy longer-term accounting strategies that can counteract the effects of random errors. We show that cooperative strategies readily emerge and persist in a range of noisy environments, with successful cooperative strategies (henceforth, cliquers) maintaining medium-term memories for partners and low thresholds for acceptable cooperation (i.e. forgiveness). The success of these strategies relies on their cliquishness—a propensity to defect with strangers if they already have an adequate number of partners. Notably, this combination of medium-term accounting, forgiveness, and cliquishness fits with empirical studies of friendship and other long-term relationships among humans.
Keywords
Partner choice , Altruism , Friendship , Cooperation , Iterated Prisonerיs Dilemma
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1537468
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