4.6 Article

Learning dynamics explains human behaviour in Prisoner's Dilemma on networks

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 11, Issue 94, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2013.1186

Keywords

evolutionary game theory; Prisoner's Dilemma; social networks; moody conditional cooperation; reinforcement learning

Funding

  1. Swiss Natural Science Fundation [PBFRP2_145872]
  2. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (Spain) through grant PRODIEVO
  3. ERA-Net on Complexity through grant RESINEE
  4. Comunidad de Madrid (Spain) through grant MODELICO-CM
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PBFRP2_145872] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Cooperative behaviour lies at the very basis of human societies, yet its evolutionary origin remains a key unsolved puzzle. Whereas reciprocity or conditional cooperation is one of the most prominent mechanisms proposed to explain the emergence of cooperation in social dilemmas, recent experimental findings on networked Prisoner's Dilemma games suggest that conditional cooperation also depends on the previous action of the player-namely on the 'mood' in which the player is currently in. Roughly, a majority of people behave as conditional cooperators if they cooperated in the past, whereas they ignore the context and free ride with high probability if they did not. However, the ultimate origin of this behaviour represents a conundrum itself. Here, we aim specifically to provide an evolutionary explanation of moody conditional cooperation (MCC). To this end, we perform an extensive analysis of different evolutionary dynamics for players' behavioural traits-ranging from standard processes used in game theory based on pay-off comparison to others that include non-economic or social factors. Our results show that only a dynamic built upon reinforcement learning is able to give rise to evolutionarily stable MCC, and at the end to reproduce the human behaviours observed in the experiments.

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