4.7 Article

The rise and fall of donation behavior through reputation

Journal

CHAOS SOLITONS & FRACTALS
Volume 152, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chaos.2021.111405

Keywords

Reputation; Donation behavior; Public goods game; Cooperation; Evolutionary game theory

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [72031009]
  2. National Social Science Foundation of China [20ZD058]

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This paper investigates the prevalence of donation behaviors in real life and the factors influencing their propagation. By analyzing different strategies in simulated populations, the authors find that extreme altruists struggle to survive without adapting, and reputation plays a key role in cooperation. Furthermore, the introduction of peculiar strategies like hypocrites and realists negatively impacts the popularization of donation behaviors in various scenarios.
Unlike in the standard public goods game (PGG), real-life donors (e.g. to charities) rarely receive any di-rect benefits from their donation behaviors to a disaster area, but donations are always prevalent. This paper studies why donation behaviors are common and the factors that can influence their propagation. The interactions among individuals are divided into two phases, including all individuals independently making decisions about whether to donate (namely donation game) and playing prisoner's dilemma with their neighbors in a structured population. We first explore the evolution of donation behaviors in the aforementioned spatial games with four competing strategies. As expected, extreme altruists can hardly survive in the population with extreme egoists unless they become shunners, who decide whether to cooperate in the prisoner's dilemma on the basis of the reputation of their opponents. Given the com-plexity of the real world, we further study the evolution of a more complex six-strategy population with additional two peculiar strategies, hypocrites and realists. We have observed more complicated phase diagrams, and multiple discontinuous phase transitions as well as a variety of spontaneously formed three-strategy cyclic states. Through the analysis of the phases and spatial dynamics, we find that these two introduced strategies will have an adverse impact on the popularization of donation behaviors in their own ways under different circumstances. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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