Evolutionary Stability and Resistance to Cheating in an Indirect Reciprocity Model Based on Reputation
Overview
Physiology
Public Health
Authors
Affiliations
Indirect reciprocity is one of the main mechanisms to explain the emergence and sustainment of altruism in societies. The standard approach to indirect reciprocity is reputation models. These are games in which players base their decisions on their opponent's reputation gained in past interactions with other players (moral assessment). The combination of actions and moral assessment leads to a large diversity of strategies; thus determining the stability of any of them against invasions by all the others is a difficult task. We use a variant of a previously introduced reputation-based model that let us systematically analyze all these invasions and determine which ones are successful. Accordingly, we are able to identify the third-order strategies (those which, apart from the action, judge considering both the reputation of the donor and that of the recipient) that are evolutionarily stable. Our results reveal that if a strategy resists the invasion of any other one sharing its same moral assessment, it can resist the invasion of any other strategy. However, if actions are not always witnessed, cheaters (i.e., individuals with a probability of defecting regardless of the opponent's reputation) have a chance to defeat the stable strategies for some choices of the probabilities of cheating and of being witnessed. Remarkably, by analyzing this issue with adaptive dynamics we find that whether an honest population resists the invasion of cheaters is determined by a Hamilton-like rule, with the probability that the cheat is discovered playing the role of the relatedness parameter.
Okada I, De Silva H Sci Rep. 2024; 14(1):17264.
PMID: 39068170 PMC: 11283462. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-67773-5.
Effects of co-players' identity and reputation in the public goods game.
Sampaio W, Freitas A, Rego G, Morello L, Boggio P Sci Rep. 2023; 13(1):13520.
PMID: 37598241 PMC: 10439960. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-40730-4.
Indirect reciprocity with stochastic and dual reputation updates.
Murase Y, Hilbe C PLoS Comput Biol. 2023; 19(7):e1011271.
PMID: 37471286 PMC: 10359017. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011271.
Social norms in indirect reciprocity with ternary reputations.
Murase Y, Kim M, Baek S Sci Rep. 2022; 12(1):455.
PMID: 35013393 PMC: 8748885. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-04033-w.
Indirect reciprocity with private, noisy, and incomplete information.
Hilbe C, Schmid L, Tkadlec J, Chatterjee K, Nowak M Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018; 115(48):12241-12246.
PMID: 30429320 PMC: 6275544. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1810565115.