The evolution of cooperation by social exclusion

The evolution of cooperation by social exclusion

Authors:   Sasaki T, Uchida S

Publication Year:   2013

Reference:  Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 280(1752):20122498 (7 February 2013) (Published online 5 December 2012)

Abstract

The exclusion of freeriders from common privileges or public acceptance is widely found in the real world. Current models on the evolution of cooperation with incentives mostly assume peer sanctioning, whereby a punisher imposes penalties on freeriders at a cost to itself. It is well known that such costly punishment has two substantial difficulties. First, a rare punishing cooperator barely subverts the asocial society of freeriders, and second, natural selection often eliminates punishing cooperators in the presence of non-punishing cooperators (namely, "second-order" freeriders). We present a game-theoretical model of social exclusion in which a punishing cooperator can exclude freeriders from benefit sharing. We show that such social exclusion can overcome the above-mentioned difficulties even if it is costly and stochastic. The results do not require a genetic relationship, repeated interaction, reputation or group selection. Instead, only a limited number of freeriders are required to prevent the second-order freeriders from eroding the social immune system.
KEYWORDS: Evolution of cooperation; Ostracism; Costly punishment; Second-order freerider; Public goods; Evolutionary game theory

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Tatsuya Sasaki

Guest Postdoctoral Research Scholar Evolution and Ecology

T +43(0) 2236 807 590

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Schlossplatz 1, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria
Phone: (+43 2236) 807 0 Fax:(+43 2236) 71 313

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