Dynamic social networks promote cooperation in experiments with humans
Evolutionary Genomics (United States) · Quantitative BioSciences · +1 more institution
Abstract
Human populations are both highly cooperative and highly organized. Human interactions are not random but rather are structured in social networks. Importantly, ties in these networks often are dynamic, changing in response to the behavior of one's social partners. This dynamic structure permits an important form of conditional action that has been explored theoretically but has received little empirical attention: People can respond to the cooperation and defection of those around them by making or breaking network links. Here, we present experimental evidence of the power of using strategic link formation and dissolution, and the network modification it entails, to stabilize cooperation in sizable groups.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 106.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 75
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Computer science
- Psychology