Volunteering as Red Queen Mechanism for Cooperation in Public Goods Games

Author:

Hauert Christoph12,De Monte Silvia13,Hofbauer Josef1,Sigmund Karl14

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Mathematics, University of Vienna, Strudlhofgasse 4, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.

2. Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Boulevard, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4.

3. Department of Physics, Danish Technical University, DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark.

4. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.

Abstract

The evolution of cooperation among nonrelated individuals is one of the fundamental problems in biology and social sciences. Reciprocal altruism fails to provide a solution if interactions are not repeated often enough or groups are too large. Punishment and reward can be very effective but require that defectors can be traced and identified. Here we present a simple but effective mechanism operating under full anonymity. Optional participation can foil exploiters and overcome the social dilemma. In voluntary public goods interactions, cooperators and defectors will coexist. We show that this result holds under very diverse assumptions on population structure and adaptation mechanisms, leading usually not to an equilibrium but to an unending cycle of adjustments (a Red Queen type of evolution). Thus, voluntary participation offers an escape hatch out of some social traps. Cooperation can subsist in sizable groups even if interactions are not repeated, defectors remain anonymous, players have no memory, and assortment is purely random.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference36 articles.

1. W. D. Hamilton Biosocial Anthropology R. Fox Ed. (Malaby London 1975) pp. 133–153.

2. The Tragedy of the Commons

3. The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism

4. J. Maynard Smith E. Szathmáry The Major Transitions in Evolution (Freeman Oxford UK 1995).

5. K. G. Binmore Playing Fair: Game Theory and the Social Contract (MIT Press Cambridge MA 1994).

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