4.7 Article

Oxytocin and the Punitive Hub-Dynamic Spread of Cooperation in Human Social Networks

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 30, Pages 5930-5943

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2303-21.2022

Keywords

cooperation; costly punishment; heterogeneous social network; oxytocin; social evolution

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This study investigates how individual cooperation spreads through human social networks and identifies oxytocin and costly punishment as biobehavioral mechanisms that facilitate the propagation of cooperation. The experiments show that giving oxytocin to central individuals increases their trust and enforcement of cooperation norms, thereby explaining the spreading of cooperation throughout the social network. Simulation results confirm that central cooperators' willingness to punish noncooperation allows the permeation of the network and enables the evolution of network cooperation.
Human society operates on large-scale cooperation. However, individual differences in cooperativeness and incentives to free ride on others??? cooperation make large-scale cooperation fragile and can lead to reduced social welfare. Thus, how individual cooperation spreads through human social networks remains puzzling from ecological, evolutionary, and societal perspectives. Here, we identify oxytocin and costly punishment as biobehavioral mechanisms that facilitate the propagation of cooperation in social networks. In three laboratory experiments (n = 870 human participants: 373 males, 497 females), individuals were embedded in heterogeneous networks and made repeated decisions with feedback in games of trust (n = 342), ultimatum bargaining (n = 324), and prisoner???s dilemma with punishment (n = 204). In each heterogeneous network, individuals at central positions (hub nodes) were given intranasal oxytocin (or placebo). Giving oxytocin (vs matching placebo) to central individuals increased their trust and enforcement of cooperation norms. Oxytocin-enhanced norm enforcement, but not elevated trust, explained the spreading of cooperation throughout the social network. Moreover, grounded in evolutionary game theory, we simulated computer agents that interacted in heterogeneous networks with central nodes varying in terms of cooperation and punishment levels. Simulation results confirmed that central cooperators??? willingness to punish noncooperation allowed the permeation of the network and enabled the evolution of network cooperation. These results identify an oxytocininitiated proximate mechanism explaining how individual cooperation facilitates network-wide cooperation in human society and shed light on the widespread phenomenon of heterogeneous composition and enforcement systems at all levels of life.

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