Abstract
AbstractDirect reciprocity has been long identified as a mechanism to enhance cooperation in social dilemmas. While most research on reciprocal cooperation has focused on symmetrical interactions, real world interactions often involve differences in power. Verbal theories have either claimed that power differences enhance or destabilize cooperation, indicating the need for a comprehensive theoretical model of how power asymmetries affect direct reciprocity. Here, we investigate the relationship between power and cooperation in two frequently studied social dilemmas, the prisoner’s dilemma (PD) and the snowdrift game (SD). Combining evolutionary game theory and agent-based models, we demonstrate that power asymmetries are detrimental to the evolution of cooperation. Strategies that are contingent on power within an interaction provide a selective advantage in the iterated SD, but not in the iterated PD. In both games, the rate of cooperation declines as power asymmetry increases, indicating that a more egalitarian distribution of the benefits of cooperation is the prerequisite for reciprocal cooperation to evolve and be maintained.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference80 articles.
1. Van Lange PAM , Balliet D , Parks CD , Van Vugt M. Social Dilemmas – The Psychology of Human Cooperation. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2015.
2. Social Dilemmas: The Anatomy of Cooperation
3. Social Dilemmas
4. Human cooperation
5. The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism