Exploring the Evolution of Altruistic Punishment with a PDE Model of Cultural Multilevel Selection
Daniel B. Cooney

TL;DR
This paper develops a PDE model to analyze how altruistic punishment and group competition influence the evolution of cooperation, revealing complex dynamics and differences from previous models.
Contribution
It introduces a PDE framework incorporating pairwise group conflicts, advancing understanding of multilevel selection in cultural evolution.
Findings
Non-monotonic relationship between punishment strength and collective payoff.
Differences observed between pairwise group competition and aggregate group-level competition.
Model provides a new analytical tool for comparing multilevel selection approaches.
Abstract
Two mechanisms that have been used to study the evolution of cooperative behavior are altruistic punishment, in which cooperative individuals pay additional costs to punish defection, and multilevel selection, in which competition between groups can help to counteract individual-level incentives to cheat. Boyd, Gintis, Bowles, and Richerson have used simulation models of cultural evolution to suggest that altruistic punishment and pairwise group-level competition can work in concert to promote cooperation, even when neither mechanism can do so on its own. In this paper, we formulate a PDE model for multilevel selection motivated by the approach of Boyd and coauthors, modeling individual-level birth-death competition with a replicator equation based on individual payoffs and describing group-level competition with pairwise conflicts based on differences in the average payoffs of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Cultural Differences and Values · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies
