Program for Evolutionary Dynamics, Department of Psychology, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Nov 29;108(48):19193-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1108243108. Epub 2011 Nov 14.
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. Our experiments explore large-scale cooperation, where subjects' cooperative actions are equally beneficial to all those with whom they interact. Consistent with previous research, we find that cooperation decays over time when social networks are shuffled randomly every round or are fixed across all rounds. We also find that, when networks are dynamic but are updated only infrequently, cooperation again fails. However, when subjects can update their network connections frequently, we see a qualitatively different outcome: Cooperation is maintained at a high level through network rewiring. Subjects preferentially break links with defectors and form new links with cooperators, creating an incentive to cooperate and leading to substantial changes in network structure. Our experiments confirm the predictions of a set of evolutionary game theoretic models and demonstrate the important role that dynamic social networks can play in supporting large-scale human cooperation.
人类群体既具有高度的合作性,又具有高度的组织性。人类的互动不是随机的,而是在社交网络中形成结构的。重要的是,这些网络中的关系往往是动态的,会随着社交伙伴的行为而变化。这种动态结构允许一种重要的条件行动形式,这种形式已经在理论上得到了探索,但在经验上却很少受到关注:人们可以通过建立或打破网络联系来回应周围人的合作和背叛。在这里,我们提供了使用策略性链接形成和消解以及由此带来的网络修改来稳定大群体中合作的实验证据。我们的实验探索了大规模合作,其中主体的合作行为对所有与其互动的人同样有利。与先前的研究一致,我们发现当社交网络在每一轮中随机洗牌或在所有轮中固定时,合作会随着时间的推移而衰减。我们还发现,当网络是动态的但更新频率很低时,合作再次失败。然而,当主体能够频繁更新其网络连接时,我们会看到一个截然不同的结果:通过网络重新布线,合作得以维持在高水平。主体优先与背叛者断开连接,并与合作者建立新的连接,这创造了合作的激励,导致网络结构发生重大变化。我们的实验证实了一组进化博弈论模型的预测,并证明了动态社交网络在支持大规模人类合作方面可以发挥重要作用。