There is ample evidence that the number of players can have an important impact on the cooperation and coordination behavior of people facing social dilemmas. With extremely few exceptions, the literature on cooperation assumes common knowledge about who is a player and how many players are involved in a certain situation. In this paper, we argue that this assumption is overly restrictive, and not even very common in real-world cooperation problems. We show theoretically and experimentally that uncertainty about the number of players in a Volunteer's Dilemma increases cooperation compared to a situation with a certain number of players. We identify additional behavioral mechanisms amplifying and impairing the effect
The evolution of cooperation among nonrelated individuals is one of the fundamental problems in biol...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effec...
It is not fully understood why we cooperate with strangers on a daily basis. In an increasingly glob...
There is ample evidence that the number of players can have an important impact on the cooperation a...
In this analysis, we examine the relationship between an individual's decision to volunteer and the ...
In a volunteer's dilemma, only one volunteer is needed to obtain a benefit for all. Volunteering is ...
Conflict and cooperation for the exploitation of public goods are usually modelled as an N-person pr...
In game-theoretic models studying the evolution of cooperation, a common assumption is that groups a...
htmlabstractSocial dilemmas are central to human society. Depletion of natural resources, climate pr...
Volunteer’s dilemmas that evolve over time are presented and modeled as noncoopera-tive n-person gam...
In many real-life situations people face a simple decision whether to volunteer or not to provide so...
We study the long-run stochastic stability properties of volunteering strategies in finite populatio...
The tension between individual and collective interests and the provision of sanctioning mechanisms ...
Conventions are arbitrary rules of behavior that coordinate social interactions. Here we study the e...
Conventions are arbitrary rules of behavior that coordinate social interactions. Here we study the e...
The evolution of cooperation among nonrelated individuals is one of the fundamental problems in biol...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effec...
It is not fully understood why we cooperate with strangers on a daily basis. In an increasingly glob...
There is ample evidence that the number of players can have an important impact on the cooperation a...
In this analysis, we examine the relationship between an individual's decision to volunteer and the ...
In a volunteer's dilemma, only one volunteer is needed to obtain a benefit for all. Volunteering is ...
Conflict and cooperation for the exploitation of public goods are usually modelled as an N-person pr...
In game-theoretic models studying the evolution of cooperation, a common assumption is that groups a...
htmlabstractSocial dilemmas are central to human society. Depletion of natural resources, climate pr...
Volunteer’s dilemmas that evolve over time are presented and modeled as noncoopera-tive n-person gam...
In many real-life situations people face a simple decision whether to volunteer or not to provide so...
We study the long-run stochastic stability properties of volunteering strategies in finite populatio...
The tension between individual and collective interests and the provision of sanctioning mechanisms ...
Conventions are arbitrary rules of behavior that coordinate social interactions. Here we study the e...
Conventions are arbitrary rules of behavior that coordinate social interactions. Here we study the e...
The evolution of cooperation among nonrelated individuals is one of the fundamental problems in biol...
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effec...
It is not fully understood why we cooperate with strangers on a daily basis. In an increasingly glob...