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Personal experience and reputation interact in human decisions to help reciprocally
Authors:Lucas Molleman  Eva van den Broek  Martijn Egas
Institution:1.Theoretical Biology, University of Groningen, Nijenborgh 7, Groningen 9747 AG, The Netherlands;2.Center for Research in Experimental Economics and Political Decision Making, University of Amsterdam, Roetersstraat 11, Amsterdam 1018 WB, The Netherlands;3.Department of Economics, University of Munich, Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1, Munich 80539, Germany;4.Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, PO Box 94240, Amsterdam 1090 GE, The Netherlands
Abstract:There is ample evidence that human cooperative behaviour towards other individuals is often conditioned on information about previous interactions. This information derives both from personal experience (direct reciprocity) and from experience of others (i.e. reputation; indirect reciprocity). Direct and indirect reciprocity have been studied separately, but humans often have access to both types of information. Here, we experimentally investigate information use in a repeated helping game. When acting as donor, subjects can condition their decisions to help recipients with both types of information at a small cost to access such information. We find that information from direct interactions weighs more heavily in decisions to help, and participants tend to react less forgivingly to negative personal experience than to negative reputation. Moreover, effects of personal experience and reputation interact in decisions to help. If a recipient''s reputation is positive, the personal experience of the donor has a weak effect on the decision to help, and vice versa. Yet if the two types of information indicate conflicting signatures of helpfulness, most decisions to help follow personal experience. To understand the roles of direct and indirect reciprocity in human cooperation, they should be studied in concert, not in isolation.
Keywords:reciprocal altruism  cooperation  direct reciprocity  indirect reciprocity  repeated games  experimental economics
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