TY - JOUR
T1 - The evolution of punishment and apology
T2 - An iterated prisoner's dilemma model
AU - Okamoto, Kyoko
AU - Matsumura, Shuichi
N1 - Funding Information:
A part of this study was presented in the symposium `Social behavior and game theory' at the 14th Congress of Primatological Society of Japan (Okayama, June 1998). We are grateful to Dr Y. Sugiyama, Dr T. Kano and other members of the Department of Ecology and Social Behavior, Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, for their helpful comments and suggestions. I thank Dr V. Hayes for correcting English. This study was supported by a grant-in-aid for encouragement of Junior Scientist from the Japanese Society for the Pr omotion of Sciences (no. 03644) to KO.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Recently, behaviors that seem to function as punishment or apology have been reported among non-human primates as well as humans. Such behaviors appear to play an important role in maintaining cooperation between individuals. Therefore, the evolution of these behaviors should be examined from the viewpoint of the evolution of cooperation. The iterated prisoner's dilemma (IPD) game is generally considered to be a standard model for the evolution of cooperation. In the present study, strategies accompanied by punishment-like attacks or apology-like behavior were introduced into the common IPD simulation. Punishment and apology were represented by the P signal and the AS signal given immediately after defection. A strategy with the P and AS signals, named the pPAS strategy, was proved to be an evolutionarily stable strategy under certain conditions. Numerical simulations were carried out according to different assigned values of the costs of punishment and apology. The simulations showed that pPAS could dominate the population (1) when the cost of giving P is relatively small, (2) when the cost of receiving P is relatively large, or (3) when the cost of giving AS is relatively large. The relative cost of giving AS had the clearest effect on the success of pPAS. pPAS can dominate the population even when a dominance asymmetry of the costs between two players was introduced. The present results suggest the possible evolution of social behaviors like punishment or apology as a means of maintaining cooperation.
AB - Recently, behaviors that seem to function as punishment or apology have been reported among non-human primates as well as humans. Such behaviors appear to play an important role in maintaining cooperation between individuals. Therefore, the evolution of these behaviors should be examined from the viewpoint of the evolution of cooperation. The iterated prisoner's dilemma (IPD) game is generally considered to be a standard model for the evolution of cooperation. In the present study, strategies accompanied by punishment-like attacks or apology-like behavior were introduced into the common IPD simulation. Punishment and apology were represented by the P signal and the AS signal given immediately after defection. A strategy with the P and AS signals, named the pPAS strategy, was proved to be an evolutionarily stable strategy under certain conditions. Numerical simulations were carried out according to different assigned values of the costs of punishment and apology. The simulations showed that pPAS could dominate the population (1) when the cost of giving P is relatively small, (2) when the cost of receiving P is relatively large, or (3) when the cost of giving AS is relatively large. The relative cost of giving AS had the clearest effect on the success of pPAS. pPAS can dominate the population even when a dominance asymmetry of the costs between two players was introduced. The present results suggest the possible evolution of social behaviors like punishment or apology as a means of maintaining cooperation.
KW - Apology
KW - Cooperation
KW - Iterated prisoner's dilemma
KW - Punishment
KW - Signal
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U2 - 10.1023/A:1011612522206
DO - 10.1023/A:1011612522206
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0034427080
SN - 0269-7653
VL - 14
SP - 703
EP - 720
JO - Evolutionary Ecology
JF - Evolutionary Ecology
IS - 8
ER -