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Evolution of direct reciprocity under uncertainty can explain human generosity in one-shot encounters.


ABSTRACT: Are humans too generous? The discovery that subjects choose to incur costs to allocate benefits to others in anonymous, one-shot economic games has posed an unsolved challenge to models of economic and evolutionary rationality. Using agent-based simulations, we show that such generosity is the necessary byproduct of selection on decision systems for regulating dyadic reciprocity under conditions of uncertainty. In deciding whether to engage in dyadic reciprocity, these systems must balance (i) the costs of mistaking a one-shot interaction for a repeated interaction (hence, risking a single chance of being exploited) with (ii) the far greater costs of mistaking a repeated interaction for a one-shot interaction (thereby precluding benefits from multiple future cooperative interactions). This asymmetry builds organisms naturally selected to cooperate even when exposed to cues that they are in one-shot interactions.

SUBMITTER: Delton AW 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3156224 | biostudies-other | 2011 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Evolution of direct reciprocity under uncertainty can explain human generosity in one-shot encounters.

Delton Andrew W AW   Krasnow Max M MM   Cosmides Leda L   Tooby John J  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20110725 32


Are humans too generous? The discovery that subjects choose to incur costs to allocate benefits to others in anonymous, one-shot economic games has posed an unsolved challenge to models of economic and evolutionary rationality. Using agent-based simulations, we show that such generosity is the necessary byproduct of selection on decision systems for regulating dyadic reciprocity under conditions of uncertainty. In deciding whether to engage in dyadic reciprocity, these systems must balance (i) t  ...[more]

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2021-02-28 | GSE167865 | GEO