In a sequential-move, finitely repeated prisoners’ dilemma game (FRPD), cooperation can be sustained if the first-mover believes her opponent might be a behavioral type who plays a tit-for-tat strategy in every period. We test this theory by revealing second-mover histories from an earlier FRPD experiment to their current opponent. Despite eliminating the possibility of reputation-building, aggregate cooperation actually increases when histories are revealed. Cooperative histories lead to increased trust, but negative histories do not cause decreased trust. We develop a behavioral model to explain these findings
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis by Raub and Weesie (1990) that embeddedness in ...
We investigate how reputational uncertainty and the rate of change of the social environment interac...
Reputational concerns are believed to play a crucial role in explaining cooperative behaviour among ...
Often the fuller the reputational record people's actions generate, the greater their incentive to e...
Recent research has shown that making people’s decisions known to others may enhance cooperation in ...
More than half a century after the first experiment on the finitely repeated prisoner’s dilemma, evi...
A large volume of theoretical and experimental studies have suggested that making information on peo...
Explaining cooperation in social dilemmas is a central issue in behavioral science, and the prisoner...
Reputation plays a key role among the mechanisms supporting cooperation in our society. This is a we...
A large body of theoretical and experimental literature suggests that exogenously imposed infinite ...
The evolution of cooperation has been the focus of intense research in the social sciences, natural ...
Cooperativeness is a defining feature of human nature. Theoreticians have suggested several mechanis...
Cooperating in the Prisoner's Dilemma is irrational and some supporting mechanism is needed to stabi...
A human solution to the problem of cooperation is the maintenance of informal reputation hierarchies...
Teams are known to behave differently from individuals, but whether they behave more cooperatively o...
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis by Raub and Weesie (1990) that embeddedness in ...
We investigate how reputational uncertainty and the rate of change of the social environment interac...
Reputational concerns are believed to play a crucial role in explaining cooperative behaviour among ...
Often the fuller the reputational record people's actions generate, the greater their incentive to e...
Recent research has shown that making people’s decisions known to others may enhance cooperation in ...
More than half a century after the first experiment on the finitely repeated prisoner’s dilemma, evi...
A large volume of theoretical and experimental studies have suggested that making information on peo...
Explaining cooperation in social dilemmas is a central issue in behavioral science, and the prisoner...
Reputation plays a key role among the mechanisms supporting cooperation in our society. This is a we...
A large body of theoretical and experimental literature suggests that exogenously imposed infinite ...
The evolution of cooperation has been the focus of intense research in the social sciences, natural ...
Cooperativeness is a defining feature of human nature. Theoreticians have suggested several mechanis...
Cooperating in the Prisoner's Dilemma is irrational and some supporting mechanism is needed to stabi...
A human solution to the problem of cooperation is the maintenance of informal reputation hierarchies...
Teams are known to behave differently from individuals, but whether they behave more cooperatively o...
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis by Raub and Weesie (1990) that embeddedness in ...
We investigate how reputational uncertainty and the rate of change of the social environment interac...
Reputational concerns are believed to play a crucial role in explaining cooperative behaviour among ...