We investigate various group-size distributions occurring in a situation where each group???s resource is exposed to appropriation by other groups. The amount of appropriation depends on the size difference between groups. Our work focuses on the cases where the entire community isolates a small group or even an individual to maximize its gain. While people???s basic motivation to form a group can be understood based on the group-size effect on multiplying a collective asset, sensitive factors that induce a asymmetric group distribution are the group efficiency and the ratio of secured assets to assets pending in a competition. We show that social rejection to a minor group may occur when the group efficiency is relatively low and their ass...
When groups compete for resources, some groups will be more successful than others, forcing out less...
Members of social groups face a trade-off between investing selfish effort for themselves and invest...
Several pressing problems in modern society result from too many people acting in their private inte...
We investigate various group-size distributions occurring in a situation where each group's resource...
The formation of groups in competition and the aggressive interactions between them are ubiquitous p...
We address the issue of the optimal size of an ethnic or religious minority from the minority’s pers...
We study formation of ostracism in a society from a game theoretical perspective. The dynamics of gr...
We investigate a setting in which members of a population, bifurcated into a majority and a minority...
What is the physical origin of player cooperation in minority game? And how to obtain maximum global...
We identify a novel ‘cultural red king effect’ that, in many cases, results in stable arrangements w...
The division of resources between a group of people may cause con- flicts: Individuals with varying ...
Abstract Individuals extracting common-pool resources in the field sometimes form outputsharing grou...
We consider a rent-seeking contest where players compete in groups for a prize of given value. One g...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
When groups compete for resources, some groups will be more successful than others, forcing out less...
Members of social groups face a trade-off between investing selfish effort for themselves and invest...
Several pressing problems in modern society result from too many people acting in their private inte...
We investigate various group-size distributions occurring in a situation where each group's resource...
The formation of groups in competition and the aggressive interactions between them are ubiquitous p...
We address the issue of the optimal size of an ethnic or religious minority from the minority’s pers...
We study formation of ostracism in a society from a game theoretical perspective. The dynamics of gr...
We investigate a setting in which members of a population, bifurcated into a majority and a minority...
What is the physical origin of player cooperation in minority game? And how to obtain maximum global...
We identify a novel ‘cultural red king effect’ that, in many cases, results in stable arrangements w...
The division of resources between a group of people may cause con- flicts: Individuals with varying ...
Abstract Individuals extracting common-pool resources in the field sometimes form outputsharing grou...
We consider a rent-seeking contest where players compete in groups for a prize of given value. One g...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
When groups compete for resources, some groups will be more successful than others, forcing out less...
Members of social groups face a trade-off between investing selfish effort for themselves and invest...
Several pressing problems in modern society result from too many people acting in their private inte...