Fishman Michael A
Department of Zoology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel.
J Theor Biol. 2003 Dec 7;225(3):285-92. doi: 10.1016/s0022-5193(03)00246-7.
Reciprocal cooperation occurs when the overall benefits of receiving help exceed the costs of donating help (Q. Rev. Biol. 46 (197) 35). That is, individuals in good condition--for whom the pertinent costs are relatively small; donate help in order to secure reciprocity in their hour of need--when the benefits of receiving a donation are large. Consequently, reciprocity occurs among individuals who occasionally need help. In particular, such individuals will be unable to help others, no matter how deserving, when in need of help themselves--involuntary defection. This paper deals with the effects of involuntary defection in the context of a specific model of indirect reciprocity (i.e. reciprocal altruism that is directed toward all the cooperative members of the community) due to Nowak and Sigmund (J. Theor. Biol.194 (1998b) 561: Sections 2-4). In that model, the authors formulate the decision rules for conditional cooperation in the context of indirect reciprocity, and demonstrate that these decision rules can account for a long-term persistence of cooperation. Here we show that addition of involuntary defection to the decision rules formulated by Nowak and Sigmund results in indirect reciprocity that is evolutionary stable under appropriate conditions. Moreover, for a wide range of parameter values, evolutionary stability of cooperation requires a mixture of conditional- and unconditional-altruist behaviors. To recollect, unconditional altruist strategy can be viewed as conditional altruist strategy sans the ability to decide when the help-soliciting individual should be refused help. That is, given involuntary defection, stability of cooperation requires an occasional forgiveness, if only by default, of a failure to donate help. Thus, we see that evolutionary stable indirect reciprocity does not require perfection in either the ability to assess the merits of the help-soliciting individuals, or the ability to donate help when it is merited. On the contrary, we are forced to conclude that reciprocity, at least in the current case, is stable only among imperfect individuals.
当接受帮助的总体收益超过提供帮助的成本时,就会出现互惠合作(《生物学季刊评论》46(197)35)。也就是说,身体状况良好的个体——对他们来说相关成本相对较小;提供帮助是为了在自己需要的时候确保得到回报——当接受捐赠的收益很大时。因此,互惠发生在偶尔需要帮助的个体之间。特别是,这样的个体在自己需要帮助时将无法帮助他人,无论他人多么值得帮助——即非自愿背叛。本文在诺瓦克和西格蒙德提出的间接互惠(即针对社区所有合作成员的互惠利他行为)的特定模型背景下,探讨了非自愿背叛的影响(《理论生物学杂志》194(1998b)561:第2 - 4节)。在该模型中,作者制定了间接互惠背景下条件合作的决策规则,并证明这些决策规则可以解释合作的长期持续存在。在这里,我们表明,将非自愿背叛添加到诺瓦克和西格蒙德制定的决策规则中,会导致在适当条件下具有进化稳定性的间接互惠。此外,对于广泛的参数值范围,合作的进化稳定性需要有条件利他行为和无条件利他行为的混合。需要说明的是,无条件利他策略可以被视为没有能力决定何时应该拒绝向寻求帮助的个体提供帮助的有条件利他策略。也就是说,考虑到非自愿背叛,合作的稳定性需要偶尔(即使只是默认)原谅未能提供帮助的行为。因此,我们看到进化稳定的间接互惠并不要求在评估寻求帮助个体的价值的能力或在有价值时提供帮助的能力方面做到完美。相反,我们不得不得出结论,至少在当前情况下,互惠仅在不完美的个体之间才是稳定的。