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I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation

Everybody has heard of neighbours, who have been fighting over some minor topic for years. The fight goes back and forth, giving the neighbours a hard time. These kind of reciprocal punishments are known as vendettas and they are a cross-cultural phenomenon. In evolutionary biology, punishment is se...

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Autores principales: Fehl, Katrin, Sommerfeld, Ralf D., Semmann, Dirk, Krambeck, Hans-Jürgen, Milinski, Manfred
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3446949/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23028776
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045093
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author Fehl, Katrin
Sommerfeld, Ralf D.
Semmann, Dirk
Krambeck, Hans-Jürgen
Milinski, Manfred
author_facet Fehl, Katrin
Sommerfeld, Ralf D.
Semmann, Dirk
Krambeck, Hans-Jürgen
Milinski, Manfred
author_sort Fehl, Katrin
collection PubMed
description Everybody has heard of neighbours, who have been fighting over some minor topic for years. The fight goes back and forth, giving the neighbours a hard time. These kind of reciprocal punishments are known as vendettas and they are a cross-cultural phenomenon. In evolutionary biology, punishment is seen as a mechanism for maintaining cooperative behaviour. However, this notion of punishment excludes vendettas. Vendettas pose a special kind of evolutionary problem: they incur high costs on individuals, i.e. costs of punishing and costs of being punished, without any benefits. Theoretically speaking, punishment should be rare in dyadic relationships and vendettas would not evolve under natural selection. In contrast, punishment is assumed to be more efficient in group environments which then can pave the way for vendettas. Accordingly, we found that under the experimental conditions of a prisoner’s dilemma game, human participants punished only rarely and vendettas are scarce. In contrast, we found that participants retaliated frequently in the group environment of a public goods game. They even engaged in cost-intense vendettas (i.e. continuous retaliation), especially when the first punishment was unjustified or ambiguous. Here, punishment was mainly targeted at defectors in the beginning, but provocations led to mushrooming of counter-punishments. Despite the counter-punishing behaviour, participants were able to enhance cooperation levels in the public goods game. Few participants even seemed to anticipate the outbreak of costly vendettas and delayed their punishment to the last possible moment. Overall, our results highlight the importance of different social environments while studying punishment as a cooperation-enhancing mechanism.
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spelling pubmed-34469492012-10-01 I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation Fehl, Katrin Sommerfeld, Ralf D. Semmann, Dirk Krambeck, Hans-Jürgen Milinski, Manfred PLoS One Research Article Everybody has heard of neighbours, who have been fighting over some minor topic for years. The fight goes back and forth, giving the neighbours a hard time. These kind of reciprocal punishments are known as vendettas and they are a cross-cultural phenomenon. In evolutionary biology, punishment is seen as a mechanism for maintaining cooperative behaviour. However, this notion of punishment excludes vendettas. Vendettas pose a special kind of evolutionary problem: they incur high costs on individuals, i.e. costs of punishing and costs of being punished, without any benefits. Theoretically speaking, punishment should be rare in dyadic relationships and vendettas would not evolve under natural selection. In contrast, punishment is assumed to be more efficient in group environments which then can pave the way for vendettas. Accordingly, we found that under the experimental conditions of a prisoner’s dilemma game, human participants punished only rarely and vendettas are scarce. In contrast, we found that participants retaliated frequently in the group environment of a public goods game. They even engaged in cost-intense vendettas (i.e. continuous retaliation), especially when the first punishment was unjustified or ambiguous. Here, punishment was mainly targeted at defectors in the beginning, but provocations led to mushrooming of counter-punishments. Despite the counter-punishing behaviour, participants were able to enhance cooperation levels in the public goods game. Few participants even seemed to anticipate the outbreak of costly vendettas and delayed their punishment to the last possible moment. Overall, our results highlight the importance of different social environments while studying punishment as a cooperation-enhancing mechanism. Public Library of Science 2012-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3446949/ /pubmed/23028776 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045093 Text en © 2012 Fehl et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fehl, Katrin
Sommerfeld, Ralf D.
Semmann, Dirk
Krambeck, Hans-Jürgen
Milinski, Manfred
I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation
title I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation
title_full I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation
title_fullStr I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation
title_full_unstemmed I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation
title_short I Dare You to Punish Me—Vendettas in Games of Cooperation
title_sort i dare you to punish me—vendettas in games of cooperation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3446949/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23028776
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045093
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