Abstract

Punishment of defectors and cooperators is prevalent when their behaviour deviates from the social norm. Why atypical behaviour is more likely to be punished than typical behaviour remains unclear. One possible proximate explanation is that individuals simply dislike norm violators. However, an alternative possibility exists: individuals may be more likely to punish atypical behaviour, because the cost of punishment generally increases with the number of individuals that are punished. We used a public goods game with third-party punishment to test whether punishment of defectors was reduced when defecting was typical, as predicted if punishment is responsive to norm violation. The cost of punishment was fixed, regardless of the number of players punished, meaning that it was not more costly to punish typical, relative to atypical, behaviour. Under these conditions, atypical behaviour was not punished more often than typical behaviour. In fact, most punishment was targeted at defectors, irrespective of whether defecting was typical or atypical. We suggest that the reduced punishment of defectors when they are common might often be explained in terms of the costs to the punisher, rather than responses to norm violators.

Highlights

  • Humans have a strong tendency to conform to social norms of behaviour [1,2,3]

  • Humans are thought to conform to a social norm of conditional cooperation, which is enforced by punishment of those who violate the norm [6]

  • Punishment was linked to gender, with male players being more likely to punish than females

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Summary

Introduction

Humans have a strong tendency to conform to social norms of behaviour [1,2,3]. Compliance with social norms has been argued to underpin the existence of large-scale cooperation in human societies [5]. Humans are thought to conform to a social norm of conditional cooperation, which is enforced by punishment of those who violate the norm [6]. Third-party punishment of defectors in a Prisoner’s Dilemma game is more severe when the partner cooperates than when both players defect [7]. Individuals in public goods game (PGG) are more likely to be punished the more their contribution deviates from the group average [8,9]

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