In any society, is the way in which individuals interact, intentionally or unintentionally, designed to maximize global benefit, or does it result in a fundamentally non-egalitarian stratification of society, where a small number of individuals inevitably dominate? Our ability to observe and record interactions between individuals in real populations has improved dramatically with modern technological improvements, but it is still a difficult task to use this data to model cooperation and collaboration between individuals, and its global effect on the entire population. To shed light on these questions, we model an individual's value in society as an epistatic mathematical function of a set of binary choices, and the collective potential of...
The presence of costly cooperation between otherwise selfish actors is not trivial. A prominent mech...
Explaining how properties at the level of individuals translate into properties at the level of coll...
Humans and other animals often follow the decisions made by others because these are indicative of t...
Human populations exhibit complex behaviors—characterized by long-range correlations and surges in a...
It is not fully understood why we cooperate with strangers on a daily basis. In an increasingly glob...
In this paper we address the general question of how social influence determines collective outcomes...
The paper adapts to richer social structures the Brock-Durlauf model of interactive discrete choice,...
The study of human interaction has taken an unprecedented quantitative and technological turn, drive...
How cooperation emerges in human societies is both an evolutionary enigma and a practical problem wi...
We identify a unique viewpoint on the collective behaviour of intelligent agents. We first develop a...
The presence of costly cooperation between otherwise selfish actors is not trivial. A prominent mech...
Many models proposed to study the evolution of collective action rely on a formalism that represents...
The presence of costly cooperation between otherwise selfish actors is not trivial. A prominent mech...
Recently, the technologies deriving from artificial intelligence and theories of self-organising ada...
There is no presumption that a collective action of interacting agents leads to collectively satisfa...
The presence of costly cooperation between otherwise selfish actors is not trivial. A prominent mech...
Explaining how properties at the level of individuals translate into properties at the level of coll...
Humans and other animals often follow the decisions made by others because these are indicative of t...
Human populations exhibit complex behaviors—characterized by long-range correlations and surges in a...
It is not fully understood why we cooperate with strangers on a daily basis. In an increasingly glob...
In this paper we address the general question of how social influence determines collective outcomes...
The paper adapts to richer social structures the Brock-Durlauf model of interactive discrete choice,...
The study of human interaction has taken an unprecedented quantitative and technological turn, drive...
How cooperation emerges in human societies is both an evolutionary enigma and a practical problem wi...
We identify a unique viewpoint on the collective behaviour of intelligent agents. We first develop a...
The presence of costly cooperation between otherwise selfish actors is not trivial. A prominent mech...
Many models proposed to study the evolution of collective action rely on a formalism that represents...
The presence of costly cooperation between otherwise selfish actors is not trivial. A prominent mech...
Recently, the technologies deriving from artificial intelligence and theories of self-organising ada...
There is no presumption that a collective action of interacting agents leads to collectively satisfa...
The presence of costly cooperation between otherwise selfish actors is not trivial. A prominent mech...
Explaining how properties at the level of individuals translate into properties at the level of coll...
Humans and other animals often follow the decisions made by others because these are indicative of t...