Abstract

Indirect reciprocity, in which individuals help others with a good reputation but not those with a bad reputation, is a mechanism for cooperation in social dilemma situations when individuals do not repeatedly interact with the same partners. In a relatively large society where indirect reciprocity is relevant, individuals may not know each other's reputation even indirectly. Previous studies investigated the situations where individuals playing the game have to determine the action possibly without knowing others' reputations. Nevertheless, the possibility that observers of the game, who generate the reputation of the interacting players, assign reputations without complete information about them has been neglected. Because an individual acts as an interacting player and as an observer on different occasions if indirect reciprocity is endogenously sustained in a society, the incompleteness of information may affect either role. We examine the game of indirect reciprocity when the reputations of players are not necessarily known to observers and to interacting players. We find that the trustful discriminator, which cooperates with good and unknown players and defects against bad players, realizes cooperative societies under seven social norms. Among the seven social norms, three of the four suspicious norms under which cooperation (defection) to unknown players leads to a good (bad) reputation enable cooperation down to a relatively small observation probability. In contrast, the three trustful norms under which both cooperation and defection to unknown players lead to a good reputation are relatively efficient.

Highlights

  • We often help others even when the helping behavior is costly

  • Several mechanisms can explain the emergence and maintenance of cooperation. In one such mechanism called indirect reciprocity, individuals are rated according to their past behavior toward others

  • Indirect reciprocity is relevant in relatively large societies where individuals do not meet each other repeatedly

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Summary

Introduction

We often help others even when the helping behavior is costly. The Prisoner’s Dilemma game and its variants are used for examining cooperative behavior in such social dilemma situations. Several mechanisms can explain the emergence and maintenance of cooperation [1,2]. Direct reciprocity, one such mechanism, is relevant when the same pair of players repeatedly interact [3,4]. To avoid retaliation from a peer player, it is beneficial for both players to maintain cooperation. Direct reciprocity cannot explain cooperation in relatively large societies, where players do not repeatedly meet each other

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