关于他人的偏好和利他的惩罚:达尔文的观点

M. Hetzer, D. Sornette
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引用次数: 1

摘要

利他惩罚——以自己的代价惩罚违反规范的人而没有物质利益——在实验经济学、实地研究和人们的日常生活中经常观察到。这种表面上非理性行为的存在通常与人类对他人的偏好有关,这种偏好将一个人的决定与她的社会环境联系起来。经济学家已经开始在他们的效用框架中纳入与他人相关的偏好,以更好地获取经验证据。虽然这些理论的补充似乎是直观的,但它们的进化基础却很少被记录下来,利他惩罚的起源仍然令人困惑。使用一种新的方法,将惩罚的公共物品实验的经验结果与基于进化主体的模拟模型紧密结合起来,使我们能够确定这种令人费解的行为的潜在关键机制。我们通过在实验数据中观察到的一组有限的行为模式来设计基于智能体的模型。我们通过比较我们对惩罚行为及其对合作水平的影响的定量预测与相应的经验观察来验证我们的结果。与描述性理论不同,我们的方法为公共物品博弈实验中利他惩罚行为的出现和存在提供了一个广泛的解释解决方案:如果不平等或不公平厌恶的变体是主要偏好集,利他惩罚就会自发地从最初不惩罚的主体群体中出现。我们特别发现,一种较弱的、不对称的不平等厌恶从数量上解释了当代实验中观察到的惩罚水平:我们的进化模型表明,不利的不平等厌恶导致利他性惩罚行为进化到与公共物品实验中的经验观察结果精确匹配的水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Other-Regarding Preferences and Altruistic Punishment: A Darwinian Perspective
Altruistic punishment - the punishment of norm violators at one's own cost without material benefit - is frequently observed in experimental economics, field studies and in people's everyday life. The existence of this ostensibly irrational behavior is often linked to other-regarding preferences in humans, which relate a person's decision to her social environment. Economists have begun incorporating other-regarding preferences in their utility frameworks to better capture empirical evidence. While these theoretical additions seem intuitive, their evolutionary foundation is poorly documented and the origin of altruistic punishment remains puzzling. Using a new approach, that closely integrates empirical results from a public goods experiment with punishment together with an evolutionary agent-based simulation model, enables us to identify the underlying key mechanism of this puzzling behavior. We design the agent-based model by means of a limited set of behavioral patterns observed in the experimental data. We validate our results by comparing our quantitative predictions of the punishment behavior and its effect on the level of cooperation with the corresponding empirical observations. Unlike descriptive theories, our approach provides a broad explanatory solution for the emergence and existence of altruistic punishment behavior in public goods game experiments: Altruistic punishment emerges spontaneously from a population of agents who are initially non-punishers, if variants of inequality or inequity aversion are the predominant preference sets. In particular we find, that a weaker, asymmetric variant of inequity aversion quantitatively explains the level of punishment observed in contemporary experiments: Our evolutionary model shows that disadvantageous inequity aversion cause altruistic punishment behavior to evolve to a level that precisely matches the empirical observations in public goods experiments.
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