Effort Perception is Made More Accurate with More Effort and When Cooperating with Slackers

被引:0
|
作者
Paul Ibbotson
Christoph Hauert
Richard Walker
机构
[1] Open University,School of Education, Childhood Youth and Sport
[2] The University of British Columbia,Department of Mathematics
[3] Open University,School of Computing and Communications
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent research on the conditions that facilitate cooperation is limited by a factor that has yet to be established: the accuracy of effort perception. Accuracy matters because the fitness of cooperative strategies depends not just on being able to perceive others’ effort but to perceive their true effort. In an experiment using a novel effort-tracker methodology, we calculate the accuracy of human effort perceptions and show that accuracy is boosted by more absolute effort (regardless of relative effort) and when cooperating with a “slacker” rather than an “altruist”. A formal model shows how such an effort-prober strategy is likely to be an adaptive solution because it gives would-be collaborators information on when to abort ventures that are not in their interest and opt for ones that are. This serves as a precautionary measure against systematic exploitation by extortionist strategies and a descent into uncooperativeness. As such, it is likely that humans have a bias to minimize mistakes in effort perception that would commit them to a disadvantageous effort-reward relationship. Overall we find support for the idea that humans have evolved smart effort detection systems that are made more accurate by those contexts most relevant for cooperative tasks.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Effort Perception is Made More Accurate with More Effort and When Cooperating with Slackers
    Ibbotson, Paul
    Hauert, Christoph
    Walker, Richard
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2019, 9 (1)
  • [2] A more accurate measurement of tax effort
    Kim, Sangheon
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2007, 14 (7-9) : 539 - 543
  • [3] The More Interest, the Less Effort Cost Perception and Effort Avoidance
    Song, Juyeon
    Kim, Sung-il
    Bong, Mimi
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [4] One more effort!
    Dedieu, Jean-Pierre
    MELANGES DE LA CASA DE VELAZQUEZ, 2017, 47 (02): : 297 - 301
  • [5] When less is more and more is less: the impact of sampling effort on species delineation
    Guenser, Pauline
    Ginot, Samuel
    Escarguel, Gilles
    Goudemand, Nicolas
    PALAEONTOLOGY, 2022, 65 (03)
  • [6] Knowledge management more effort - More success?
    Tillian, B
    JOURNAL OF UNIVERSAL COMPUTER SCIENCE, 2001, 7 (07): : 602 - 609
  • [7] Protocol behavior: More effort, more gains?
    Mamatas, L
    Tsaoussidis, V
    2004 IEEE 15TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON PERSONAL, INDOOR AND MOBILE RADIO COMMUNICATIONS, VOLS 1-4, PROCEEDINGS, 2004, : 125 - 129
  • [8] Competitive prizes: when less scrutiny induces more effort
    Dubey, P
    Wu, CW
    JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS, 2001, 36 (04) : 311 - 336
  • [9] MATERIALS DEMAND MORE EFFORT
    FORD, H
    ENGINEERING, 1985, 225 (7-8): : 417 - 417
  • [10] Is "real" effort more real?
    Dutcher, E. Glenn
    Salmon, Timothy C.
    Saral, Krista J.
    EXPERIMENTAL ECONOMICS, 2024,