In a world in which many pressing global issues require large scale cooperation, understanding the group size effect on cooperative behavior is a topic of central importance. Yet, the nature of this effect remains largely unknown, with lab experiments insisting that it is either positive or negative or null, and field experiments suggesting that it is instead curvilinear. Here we shed light on this apparent contradiction by considering a novel class of public goods games inspired to the realistic scenario in which the natural output limits of the public good imply that the benefit of cooperation increases fast for early contributions and then decelerates. We report on a large lab experiment providing evidence that, in this case, group size ...
Monitoring with implicated punishment is common in human societies to avert freeriding on common goo...
Reputation and punishment are two distinct mechanisms that facilitate cooperation among strangers. H...
Abstract of associated article: Numerous studies have examined factors influencing the likelihood of...
In a world in which many pressing global issues require large scale cooperation, understanding the g...
In a world in which many pressing global issues require large scale cooperation, under-standing the ...
Understanding whether the size of the interacting group has an effect on cooperative behavior has be...
htmlabstractSocial dilemmas are central to human society. Depletion of natural resources, climate pr...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
Are larger groups better at cooperation than smaller groups? This paper investigates, under controll...
How the size of social groups affects the evolution of cooperative behaviors is a classic question i...
Abstract of associated article: Are larger groups better at cooperation than smaller groups? This pa...
Abstract: This paper examines cooperation in threshold public goods and common resources games by c...
Li-Chen Hsu* Abstract: We examine cooperation in threshold public goods and commons games by conside...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. There is evidence that individuals are oft...
Monitoring with implicated punishment is common in human societies to avert freeriding on common goo...
Reputation and punishment are two distinct mechanisms that facilitate cooperation among strangers. H...
Abstract of associated article: Numerous studies have examined factors influencing the likelihood of...
In a world in which many pressing global issues require large scale cooperation, understanding the g...
In a world in which many pressing global issues require large scale cooperation, under-standing the ...
Understanding whether the size of the interacting group has an effect on cooperative behavior has be...
htmlabstractSocial dilemmas are central to human society. Depletion of natural resources, climate pr...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
We study the effect of group size on cooperation in voluntary contribution mechanism games. As in pr...
Are larger groups better at cooperation than smaller groups? This paper investigates, under controll...
How the size of social groups affects the evolution of cooperative behaviors is a classic question i...
Abstract of associated article: Are larger groups better at cooperation than smaller groups? This pa...
Abstract: This paper examines cooperation in threshold public goods and common resources games by c...
Li-Chen Hsu* Abstract: We examine cooperation in threshold public goods and commons games by conside...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. There is evidence that individuals are oft...
Monitoring with implicated punishment is common in human societies to avert freeriding on common goo...
Reputation and punishment are two distinct mechanisms that facilitate cooperation among strangers. H...
Abstract of associated article: Numerous studies have examined factors influencing the likelihood of...