Publication: Human behavior in prisoner's dilemma experiments suppresses network reciprocity
Loading...
Download
Advisors
Tutors
Editor
Publication date
Defense date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
publication.page.ispartofseries
Creative Commons license
To cite this item, use the following identifier: https://hdl.handle.net/10016/18983
Abstract
During the last few years, much research has been devoted to strategic interactions on complex networks. In this context, the Prisoner's Dilemma has become a paradigmatic model, and it has been established that imitative evolutionary dynamics lead to very different outcomes depending on the details of the network. We here report that when one takes into account the real behavior of people observed in the experiments, both at the mean-field level and on utterly different networks, the observed level of cooperation is the same. We thus show that when human subjects interact in a heterogeneous mix including cooperators, defectors and moody conditional cooperators, the structure of the population does not promote or inhibit cooperation with respect to a well mixed population.
Note
Funder
Bibliographic citation
Scientific Reports, 2, article 325 (March 2012), pp. 1-4
DOI: 10.1038/srep00325