Abstract Reputation is a powerful mechanism to enforce cooperation among unrelated individuals through indirect reciprocity, but it suffers from disagreement originating from private assessment, noise, and incomplete information. In this work, we investigate stability of cooperation in the donation game by regarding each player’s reputation and behaviour as continuous variables. Through perturbative calculation, we derive a condition that a social norm should satisfy to give penalties to its close variants, provided that everyone initially cooperates with a good reputation, and this result is supported by numerical simulation. A crucial factor of the condition is whether a well-reputed player’s donation to an ill-reputed co-player is apprec...
Abstract Humans are capable of solving cooperation problems following social norms. Social norms dic...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism that can promote cooperation among populations in which individu...
The evolution of costly cooperation between selfish individuals seems to contradict Darwinian select...
Research has shown that cooperative action struggles to emerge in the noisy variant of the donation ...
Indirect reciprocity in evolutionary game theory is a prominent mechanism for explaining the evoluti...
Recent theory predicts harsh and stochastic conditions to generally promote the evolution of coopera...
Indirect reciprocity, whereby individuals cooperate with others of good standing, is a powerful and ...
Indirect reciprocity explores how humans act when their reputation is at stake, and which social nor...
Indirect reciprocity describes a class of reputation-based mechanisms which may explain the prevale...
Indirect reciprocity1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is a key mechanism for the evolution of human cooperation. Our beh...
Indirect reciprocity is one of the main mechanisms to explain the emergence and sustainment of altru...
Evaluation relationships are pivotal for maintaining a cooperative society. A formation of the evalu...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for the evolution of cooperation based on social norms. This mec...
<div><p>We study the evolution of cooperation in a model of indirect reciprocity where people intera...
Reputation formation is a key to understanding indirect reciprocity. In particular, the way to assig...
Abstract Humans are capable of solving cooperation problems following social norms. Social norms dic...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism that can promote cooperation among populations in which individu...
The evolution of costly cooperation between selfish individuals seems to contradict Darwinian select...
Research has shown that cooperative action struggles to emerge in the noisy variant of the donation ...
Indirect reciprocity in evolutionary game theory is a prominent mechanism for explaining the evoluti...
Recent theory predicts harsh and stochastic conditions to generally promote the evolution of coopera...
Indirect reciprocity, whereby individuals cooperate with others of good standing, is a powerful and ...
Indirect reciprocity explores how humans act when their reputation is at stake, and which social nor...
Indirect reciprocity describes a class of reputation-based mechanisms which may explain the prevale...
Indirect reciprocity1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is a key mechanism for the evolution of human cooperation. Our beh...
Indirect reciprocity is one of the main mechanisms to explain the emergence and sustainment of altru...
Evaluation relationships are pivotal for maintaining a cooperative society. A formation of the evalu...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for the evolution of cooperation based on social norms. This mec...
<div><p>We study the evolution of cooperation in a model of indirect reciprocity where people intera...
Reputation formation is a key to understanding indirect reciprocity. In particular, the way to assig...
Abstract Humans are capable of solving cooperation problems following social norms. Social norms dic...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism that can promote cooperation among populations in which individu...
The evolution of costly cooperation between selfish individuals seems to contradict Darwinian select...