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Who should pay the price? Profiting from selfishness

Date:
May 14, 2015
Source:
PLOS
Summary:
Social dilemmas, in which an individual profits from selfishness, unless the whole group chooses the selfish option, have long provided an academic challenge. A new study theoretically analyzes the effects of incentives and meta-incentives on resolving social dilemmas. Researchers devise and analyze a replicator dynamics model of the extended public good games to solve the issue.
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Social dilemmas, in which an individual profits from selfishness, unless the whole group chooses the selfish option, have long provided an academic challenge. A new study publishing in PLOS Computational Biology theoretically analyzes the effects of incentives and meta-incentives on resolving social dilemmas. Soka University researcher Dr Isamu Okada and colleagues devise and analyze a replicator dynamics model of the extended public good games to solve the issue.

The authors explain that the meta-incentives encouraging rewards given to co-operators in social dilemmas significantly prevent cooperative incentive-non-providers who shirk their duty to provide incentives to others, or the second-order free riders.

The authors focused on one human trait, a linkage, which means individuals who are willing to provide incentives would automatically provide meta-incentives as well.

Allowing a reward-to-reward linkage, rather than a punishment system, can resolve the social dilemma without any social costs for formal incentive systems.

"Unexpectedly, the role of the reward system in resolving social dilemmas is significant," says Okada. "We would apply it to real social and biological situations in the absence of the strong institutions by analyzing the efficiency of incentives required for keeping cooperation."


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Journal Reference:

  1. Isamu Okada, Hitoshi Yamamoto, Fujio Toriumi, Tatsuya Sasaki. The Effect of Incentives and Meta-incentives on the Evolution of Cooperation. PLOS Computational Biology, 2015; 11 (5): e1004232 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004232

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PLOS. "Who should pay the price? Profiting from selfishness." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 14 May 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150514142948.htm>.
PLOS. (2015, May 14). Who should pay the price? Profiting from selfishness. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 28, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150514142948.htm
PLOS. "Who should pay the price? Profiting from selfishness." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150514142948.htm (accessed March 28, 2024).

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