Self-organized institutions in evolutionary dynamical-systems games

被引:0
作者
Itao, Kenji [1 ]
Kaneko, Kunihiko [2 ]
机构
[1] RIKEN, Dynam Collaborat Unit, Ctr Brain Sci, Computat Grp, Wako, Saitama 3510198, Japan
[2] Univ Copenhagen, Niels Bohr Inst, Biocomplex & Biophys, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
关键词
social institutions; evolutionary game; dynamical-systems game; common-pool resource management; COOPERATION; PUNISHMENT;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.2500960122
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Social institutions are systems of shared norms and rules that regulate people's behaviors, often emerging without external enforcement. They provide criteria to distinguish cooperation from defection and establish rules to sustain cooperation, shaped through long-term trial and error. While principles for successful institutions have been proposed, the mechanisms underlying their emergence remain poorly understood. To address this, we introduce the evolutionary dynamical-systems game theory that couples game actions with environmental dynamics and explores the evolution of cognitive frameworks for decision-making. We analyze a minimal model of common-pool resource management, where resources grow naturally and are harvested. Players use decision-making functions to determine whether to harvest at each step, based on environmental and peer monitoring. After evolution, decision-making functions enable players to detect selfish harvesting and punish it by overharvesting, which degrades the environment. This process leads to the self-organization of norms that classify harvesting actions as cooperative, defective, or punitive. The emergent norms for "cooperativeness" and rules of punishment serve as institutions. The environmental and players' states converge to distinct modes characterized by limit-cycle attractors, representing temporal regularities in socio-ecological systems. These modes remain stable despite slight variations in individual decision-making, illustrating the stability of institutions. We measure evolutionary robustness of decision-making functions, defined as the capacity to keep dominance against invasion. It is revealed that plasticity, the ability to adjust actions to cope with diverse opponents, allows for such robustness. This work introduces foundational concepts in evolutionary dynamical-systems games and elucidates the mechanisms underlying the self-organization of social institutions.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 58 条
[1]   Dynamical systems game theory and dynamics of games [J].
Akiyama, E ;
Kaneko, R .
PHYSICA D-NONLINEAR PHENOMENA, 2000, 147 (3-4) :221-258
[2]   Dynamical systems game theory II - A new approach to the problem of the social dilemma [J].
Akiyama, E ;
Kaneko, K .
PHYSICA D-NONLINEAR PHENOMENA, 2002, 167 (1-2) :36-71
[3]   The cultural evolution of collective property rights for sustainable resource governance [J].
Andrews, Jeffrey ;
Clark, Matthew ;
Hillis, Vicken ;
Mulder, Monique Borgerhoff .
NATURE SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 7 (04) :404-412
[4]  
[Anonymous], 1994, Rules, Games, and Common-Pool Resources
[5]  
Apaloo J, 2009, EVOL ECOL RES, V11, P489
[6]   Managing Ontong Java']Java: Social institutions for production and governance of atoll resources in Solomon Islands [J].
Bayliss-Smith, Tim ;
Gough, Katherine V. ;
Christensen, Andreas Egelund ;
Kristensen, Soren Pilgaard .
SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF TROPICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2010, 31 (01) :55-69
[7]   Why cultural distance can promote - or impede - group-beneficial outcomes [J].
Beheim, Bret Alexander ;
Bell, Adrian Viliami .
EVOLUTIONARY HUMAN SCIENCES, 2024, 6
[8]   The evolution of altruistic punishment [J].
Boyd, R ;
Gintis, H ;
Bowles, S ;
Richerson, PJ .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2003, 100 (06) :3531-3535
[9]   PUNISHMENT ALLOWS THE EVOLUTION OF COOPERATION (OR ANYTHING ELSE) IN SIZABLE GROUPS [J].
BOYD, R ;
RICHERSON, PJ .
ETHOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 1992, 13 (03) :171-195
[10]   The naturalness of (many) social institutions: evolved cognition as their foundation [J].
Boyer, Pascal ;
Petersen, Michael Bang .
JOURNAL OF INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS, 2012, 8 (01) :1-25