Partner choice increases observed reciprocity-based cooperation but decreases unobserved stake-based cooperation
Pat Barclay

TL;DR
Partner choice can boost visible cooperation but reduce hidden support, affecting overall cooperative behavior depending on context.
Contribution
A mathematical model showing how partner choice affects two distinct types of helping behaviors.
Findings
Partner choice increases reciprocity-based helping when others are watching.
Partner choice decreases stake-based helping that maintains partner condition.
The net effect of partner choice depends on interaction length, reputation, and partner diversity.
Abstract
According to current theory and experiments, cooperation is more likely to evolve when organisms can choose to replace uncooperative partners with cooperative ones. However, there is a downside to this partner choice: when partners can be easily replaced, organisms have less stake in their partners’ welfare and will therefore be less likely to help keep those partners alive and well enough to reciprocate. Here, I present a mathematical model showing that when a third party is present, organisms will provide more observable help to their partners (reciprocity/signalling-based helping), but less anonymous help that would keep that partner in good condition (stake-based helping). The net effect of partner choice depends on the relative strength of these two factors: partner choice has a more positive effect if interactions are short (i.e. less stake), when observers judge based on observed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
