Previous research on cooperation has primarily focused on egalitarian interactions, overlooking a fundamental feature of social life: hierarchy and power asymmetry. While recent accounts posit that hierarchies can reduce within-group conflict, individuals who possess high rank or power tend to show less cooperation. How, then, is cooperation achieved within groups that contain power asymmetries? To address this question, the present research examines how relative power affects cooperation and strategies, such as punishment and gossip, to promote cooperation in social dilemmas. In two studies involving online real-time interactions in dyads (N = 246) and four-person groups (N = 371), we manipulate power by varying individuals’ ability to dis...
In the present chapter, we advance a reciprocal influence model of social power. Our model is rooted...
Humans often cooperate, voluntarily paying an individual cost to supply a benefit to others. Public ...
An open problem in evolutionary game dynamics is to understand the effect of peer pressure on cooper...
Previous research on cooperation has primarily focused on egalitarian interactions, overlooking a fu...
The interplay of social structure and cooperative behavior is under much scrutiny lately as behavior...
We investigate the effects of power on cooperation in repeated social dilemma settings. Groups of fi...
Asymmetries in power permeate social life, relationships, and groups. Previous studies have long inv...
In this research, we examine how cooperation emerges and develops in sequential dyadic interactions ...
Many social organisms engage in collective actions in which there is a mismatch between individual a...
Previous research suggests that it is difficult to maintain cooperation in a large society when ther...
Kuhlman, D. MichaelPeople frequently have interactions where they are interdependent, but differ in ...
Cooperation is ubiquitous in the natural world. What seems nonsensical is why natural selection favo...
People perform greater within-group cooperation when their groups face external threats, such as hos...
Peer punishment is widely considered a key mechanism supporting cooperation in human groups. Althoug...
Can egalitarian norms or conventions survive the presence of dominant individuals who are ensured of...
In the present chapter, we advance a reciprocal influence model of social power. Our model is rooted...
Humans often cooperate, voluntarily paying an individual cost to supply a benefit to others. Public ...
An open problem in evolutionary game dynamics is to understand the effect of peer pressure on cooper...
Previous research on cooperation has primarily focused on egalitarian interactions, overlooking a fu...
The interplay of social structure and cooperative behavior is under much scrutiny lately as behavior...
We investigate the effects of power on cooperation in repeated social dilemma settings. Groups of fi...
Asymmetries in power permeate social life, relationships, and groups. Previous studies have long inv...
In this research, we examine how cooperation emerges and develops in sequential dyadic interactions ...
Many social organisms engage in collective actions in which there is a mismatch between individual a...
Previous research suggests that it is difficult to maintain cooperation in a large society when ther...
Kuhlman, D. MichaelPeople frequently have interactions where they are interdependent, but differ in ...
Cooperation is ubiquitous in the natural world. What seems nonsensical is why natural selection favo...
People perform greater within-group cooperation when their groups face external threats, such as hos...
Peer punishment is widely considered a key mechanism supporting cooperation in human groups. Althoug...
Can egalitarian norms or conventions survive the presence of dominant individuals who are ensured of...
In the present chapter, we advance a reciprocal influence model of social power. Our model is rooted...
Humans often cooperate, voluntarily paying an individual cost to supply a benefit to others. Public ...
An open problem in evolutionary game dynamics is to understand the effect of peer pressure on cooper...