Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain cooperation in human social networks; this behaviour can supplement behavioural reciprocity, whereby humans are influenced to cooperate by peer pressure. However, it is unknown how the rate of forming and breaking social ties affects our capacity to cooperate. Here we use a series of online experiments involving 1,529 unique participants embedded in 90 experimental networks, to show that there is a 'Goldilocks' effect of network dynamism on cooperation. When the rate of change in social ties is too low, subjects choose to have many ties, even if they attach to defectors. When the rate is too high, cooperators cannot detach from defectors as much a...
Social networks--diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups--are increasingly view...
While social network structures are thought to promote cooperation through reputation effects, as su...
While social network structures are thought to promote cooperation through reputation effects, as su...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Individual acts of cooperation give rise to dynamic social networks. Traditionally, models for coope...
Theoretical models suggest that social networks influence the evolution of cooperation, but to date ...
Individual acts of cooperation give rise to dynamic social networks. Traditionally, models for coope...
Cooperation is essential for successful human societies. Thus, understanding how cooperative and sel...
Cooperation is essential for successful human societies. Thus, understanding how cooperative and sel...
Social networks - diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups - are increasingly vi...
Social networks - diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups - are increasingly vi...
Social networks – diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups – are increasingly vi...
Social networks--diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups--are increasingly view...
While social network structures are thought to promote cooperation through reputation effects, as su...
While social network structures are thought to promote cooperation through reputation effects, as su...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Recent studies suggest that allowing individuals to choose their partners can help to maintain coope...
Individual acts of cooperation give rise to dynamic social networks. Traditionally, models for coope...
Theoretical models suggest that social networks influence the evolution of cooperation, but to date ...
Individual acts of cooperation give rise to dynamic social networks. Traditionally, models for coope...
Cooperation is essential for successful human societies. Thus, understanding how cooperative and sel...
Cooperation is essential for successful human societies. Thus, understanding how cooperative and sel...
Social networks - diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups - are increasingly vi...
Social networks - diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups - are increasingly vi...
Social networks – diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups – are increasingly vi...
Social networks--diagrams which reflect the social structure of animal groups--are increasingly view...
While social network structures are thought to promote cooperation through reputation effects, as su...
While social network structures are thought to promote cooperation through reputation effects, as su...