This paper studies the possibility of whole population cooperation based on players' preferences. Consider the following infinitely repeated game, similar to Ghosh and Ray (1996). At each stage, uncountable numbers of players are randomly matched without information about their partners' past actions and play a prisoner's dilemma game. The players have the option to continue their relationship, and they all have the same discount factor. Also, they have two possible types: high ability player (H) or low ability player (L). H can produce better outcomes for its partner as well as for itself than L can. I look for an equilibrium that is robust against both pair-wise deviation and individual deviation and call such equilibrium a social equilib...
Explaining cooperation in social dilemmas is a central issue in behavioral science, and the prisoner...
11 pages, 5 figures.-- ArXiv pre-print available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.2587Final publisher v...
It is well known in evolutionary game theory that population clustering in Prisoner's Dilemma games ...
This paper studies the possibility of cooperation based on players' preferences. Consider the follow...
This paper studies the possibility of whole population cooperation based on playerspreferences. Cons...
In my thesis, I study social interaction of the following form: each agent of an infinite population...
This paper develops a new theory of community enforcement that explains how cooperation can be susta...
In this paper I investigate the evolution of cooperation in the prisoner's dilemma when individuals ...
A rich body of literature has proposed that pairs behave significantly differently from individuals ...
We investigate the motives for cooperation in the one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma (PD). A prior study fi...
Exogenously imposed infinite repetition is known to mitigate people’s uncooperative behaviors in dil...
A large body of theoretical and experimental literature suggests that exogenously imposed infinite ...
This paper presents an evolutionary game theoretic analysis of the dynamics of a population of priso...
Exogenously imposed infinite repetition is known to mitigate people’s uncooperative behaviors in dil...
Explaining cooperation in social dilemmas is a central issue in behavioral science, and the prisoner...
11 pages, 5 figures.-- ArXiv pre-print available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.2587Final publisher v...
It is well known in evolutionary game theory that population clustering in Prisoner's Dilemma games ...
This paper studies the possibility of cooperation based on players' preferences. Consider the follow...
This paper studies the possibility of whole population cooperation based on playerspreferences. Cons...
In my thesis, I study social interaction of the following form: each agent of an infinite population...
This paper develops a new theory of community enforcement that explains how cooperation can be susta...
In this paper I investigate the evolution of cooperation in the prisoner's dilemma when individuals ...
A rich body of literature has proposed that pairs behave significantly differently from individuals ...
We investigate the motives for cooperation in the one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma (PD). A prior study fi...
Exogenously imposed infinite repetition is known to mitigate people’s uncooperative behaviors in dil...
A large body of theoretical and experimental literature suggests that exogenously imposed infinite ...
This paper presents an evolutionary game theoretic analysis of the dynamics of a population of priso...
Exogenously imposed infinite repetition is known to mitigate people’s uncooperative behaviors in dil...
Explaining cooperation in social dilemmas is a central issue in behavioral science, and the prisoner...
11 pages, 5 figures.-- ArXiv pre-print available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.2587Final publisher v...
It is well known in evolutionary game theory that population clustering in Prisoner's Dilemma games ...