The Shared Reward Dilemma
Abstract
One of the most direct human mechanisms of promoting cooperation is rewarding it. We study the effect of sharing a reward among cooperators in the most stringent form of social dilemma, namely the Prisoner's Dilemma. Specifically, for a group of players that collect payoffs by playing a pairwise Prisoner's Dilemma game with their partners, we consider an external entity that distributes a fixed reward equally among all cooperators. Thus, individuals confront a new dilemma: on the one hand, they may be inclined to choose the shared reward despite the possibility of being exploited by defectors; on the other hand, if too many players do that, cooperators will obtain a poor reward and defectors will outperform them. By appropriately tuning the amount to be shared a vast variety of scenarios arises, including traditional ones in the study of cooperation as well as more complex situations where unexpected behavior can occur. We provide a complete classification of the equilibria of the -player game as well as of its evolutionary dynamics.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.0707.2587,
title = {The Shared Reward Dilemma},
author = {J. A. Cuesta and R. Jimenez and H. Lugo and A. Sanchez},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0707.2587},
year = {2012}
}
Comments
Major rewriting, new appendix, new figures