An evolutionary game approach to culture- Illustration by an .ppt
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1、1,An evolutionary game approach to culture: Illustration by an adaptive norm development,Tatsuya Kameda (Hokkaido University) tkamedalet.hokudai.ac.jphttp:/lynx.let.hokudai.ac.jp/members/kameda,CEFOM/21, 2nd Workshop Culture, Norm, and Evolution Hokkaido University, Aug. 6-8, 2003,2,Overview,Resurge
2、nce of collective constructs (e.g., norms, conventions, values) in social sciences How can we study these collective constructs fruitfully? Adaptive perspective Evolutionary game theory as a useful research tool An illustration with communal-sharing norm in primordial societies,3,Social norm,Cialdin
3、i they may or may not be stated explicitly, and any sanctions for deviating from them come from social networks, not the legal system” (p.152). Socially-shared rules that emerge and are sustained through peoples autonomous interaction, not necessarily with formal regulating authorities or forces suc
4、h as laws,4,Theory of norm development?,Emergence and sustainability of social norms as core issues for any theory of social norms. But, do we have a reasonable theory of norm development in this sense? Classic studies on norm development (e.g., Sherif, 1936; Jacobs & Campbell, 1961): adaptively irr
5、elevant “norms” Social/cultural learning as a general engine for norm development, but,5,Theory of norm development?,A more fundamental question: Why some beliefs are acquired socially and are maintained as a shared rule, while other beliefs are not. Adaptive/evolutionary perspective Beliefs that he
6、lp us acquire a fit behavior in a given social/physical environment are more likely to be transmitted culturally and maintained as a social norm.,6,Illustration: Norms about food-sharing in primordial societies,Kaplan & Hill (1985): Fieldwork on the Ache foragers in Paraguay Collected resources (veg
7、etables, fruits) Kin-sharing Hunted game (peccary, monkey, deer) Communal-sharing including non-family members widely Existence of two different sharing rules/norms in the same society: Why?,7,Why communal-sharing of hunted games?,Risk-reduction hypothesis Acquisition of a meat is a highly variable,
8、 uncertain prospect, compared to the provision of collected resources. Communal-sharing system functions as a collective-risk reduction device. By including more individuals in the risk-pooling group, the variance in food supply decreases exponentially.,8,Intuitively appealing, but truly adaptive ex
9、planation?,Problem of egoism in social sharing Hunted meat is often regarded as a common property or public goods in hunter-gather societies. What if egoists emerge in the group who just share others acquisitions but are never willing to share his own acquisition? Emphasizing adaptive function of th
10、e whole system, but silent about how those egoists are precluded in the group. Need a theory based on individual-level adaptation rather than group-level adaptation.,9,A theory about development of the communal sharing norm,Proposing a theory based on individual-level adaptation Using an evolutionar
11、y game analysis Maynard Smith (1982): Evolutionary biology Axelrod (1984): Introduction to social sciences,10,Evolutionary game,Represents various behavioral/cognitive properties of individuals as strategies in a game. Examines how each strategy performs in the game against other strategies in terms
12、 of net profit. More fit strategies proliferate in the population gradually (via social/cultural learning). Different from classical game theory, it does not assume players with super-intelligent information processing ability.,11,Applying the evolutionary game analysis to adaptive norm development,
13、EGA: “Does the interaction among given individual behavioral/cognitive strategies lead to a stable collective state (“evolutionary equilibrium”) where the population is dominated by a single strategy (or a set of strategies)?” Social norm: a stable set of socially-shared behavioral/cognitive propert
14、ies (Cialdini & Trost, 1998) EGA is particularly suited for examining adaptive norm developments in societies.,12,Our model: 4 behavioral strategies about sharing under uncertainty,13,Key Question: Can communal sharers outperform other types of members in the population?,14,Evolutionary computer sim
15、ulations,Implement the four behavioral strategies in a same population and let them interact. A strategy that achieves higher profit than the other strategies increase its proportion in the population gradually. Emergence of a stable equilibrium over time?,15,Results of a simulation starting with ne
16、arly 100% egoists in the population,Evolvable from nearly zero,Stable,16,2nd-(and higher-) order free-riding? How can this issue be solved?,17,Communal sharers,18,However, the infinite regress is blocked. The lukewarm members (1st-order free rider) quickly acquire behavioral propensity to be less re
17、active (less likely to engage in fighting when refused access to the resource) against intolerant members (p2), than against non-sharers (p1). p1 p2 Lukewarm members p1 is already small. Thus, p2 is negligible. That is, lukewarm members back off, when refused to access the resource by the intolerant
18、 members. So, no fitness differences accrue between the tolerant and the intolerant members. Tolerant members can survive, while effectively eliminating the lukewarm members.See Kameda, Takezawa & Hastie (2003) for details.,19,“Communal-sharing mind” under uncertainty?,Conceptually parallel patterns
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