Indirect reciprocity is the most elaborate and cognitively demanding(1) of all known cooperation mechanisms(2), and is the most specifically human(1,3) because it involves reputation and status. By helping someone, individuals may increase their reputation, which may change the predisposition of others to help them in future. The revision of an individual's reputation depends on the social norms that establish what characterizes a good or bad action and thus provide a basis for morality(3). Norms based on indirect reciprocity are often sufficiently complex that an individual's ability to follow subjective rules becomes important(4-6), even in models that disregard the past reputations of individuals, and reduce reputations to either 'good' ...
Indirect reciprocity is a major mechanism in the maintenance of cooperation among unrelated individu...
Indirect reciprocity1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is a key mechanism for the evolution of human cooperation. Our beh...
JMP acknowledges support from FCT, Portugal, and the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard Un...
Indirect reciprocity, besides providing a convenient framework to address the evolution of moral sys...
Social norms regulate actions in artificial societies, steering collective behavior towards desirabl...
Social norms regulate actions in artificial societies, steering collective behavior towards desirabl...
Humans are capable of solving cooperation problems following social norms. Social norms dictate appr...
<div><p>Indirect reciprocity, besides providing a convenient framework to address the evolution of m...
Indirect reciprocity, besides providing a convenient framework to address the evolution of moral sys...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for the evolution of cooperation based on social norms. This mec...
Social norms can help solving cooperation dilemmas, constituting a key ingredient in systems of indi...
Indirect reciprocity explores how humans act when their reputation is at stake, and which social nor...
Social norms can help solving cooperation dilemmas, constituting a key ingredient in systems of indi...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism that explains large-scale cooperation in human societies. In ind...
We study the evolution of cooperation in a model of indirect reciprocity where people inter-act in p...
Indirect reciprocity is a major mechanism in the maintenance of cooperation among unrelated individu...
Indirect reciprocity1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is a key mechanism for the evolution of human cooperation. Our beh...
JMP acknowledges support from FCT, Portugal, and the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard Un...
Indirect reciprocity, besides providing a convenient framework to address the evolution of moral sys...
Social norms regulate actions in artificial societies, steering collective behavior towards desirabl...
Social norms regulate actions in artificial societies, steering collective behavior towards desirabl...
Humans are capable of solving cooperation problems following social norms. Social norms dictate appr...
<div><p>Indirect reciprocity, besides providing a convenient framework to address the evolution of m...
Indirect reciprocity, besides providing a convenient framework to address the evolution of moral sys...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for the evolution of cooperation based on social norms. This mec...
Social norms can help solving cooperation dilemmas, constituting a key ingredient in systems of indi...
Indirect reciprocity explores how humans act when their reputation is at stake, and which social nor...
Social norms can help solving cooperation dilemmas, constituting a key ingredient in systems of indi...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism that explains large-scale cooperation in human societies. In ind...
We study the evolution of cooperation in a model of indirect reciprocity where people inter-act in p...
Indirect reciprocity is a major mechanism in the maintenance of cooperation among unrelated individu...
Indirect reciprocity1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is a key mechanism for the evolution of human cooperation. Our beh...
JMP acknowledges support from FCT, Portugal, and the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard Un...