TY - JOUR
T1 - Optional participation only provides a narrow scope for sustaining cooperation
AU - Khatun, Khadija
AU - Shen, Chen
AU - Tanimoto, Jun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Physical Society.
PY - 2025/2
Y1 - 2025/2
N2 - Understanding how cooperation emerges in public goods games is crucial for addressing societal challenges. While optional participation can establish cooperation without identifying cooperators, it relies on specific assumptions - that individuals abstain and receive a non-negative payoff, or that nonparticipants cause damage to public goods - which limits our understanding of its broader role. We generalize this mechanism by considering nonparticipants' payoffs and their potential direct influence on public goods, allowing us to examine how various strategic motives for nonparticipation affect cooperation. Using replicator dynamics, we find that cooperation thrives only when nonparticipants are motivated by individualistic or prosocial values, with individualistic motivations yielding optimal cooperation. These findings are robust to mutation, which slightly enlarges the region where cooperation can be maintained through cyclic dominance among strategies. Our results suggest that while optional participation can benefit cooperation, its effectiveness is limited and highlights the limitations of bottom-up schemes in supporting public goods.
AB - Understanding how cooperation emerges in public goods games is crucial for addressing societal challenges. While optional participation can establish cooperation without identifying cooperators, it relies on specific assumptions - that individuals abstain and receive a non-negative payoff, or that nonparticipants cause damage to public goods - which limits our understanding of its broader role. We generalize this mechanism by considering nonparticipants' payoffs and their potential direct influence on public goods, allowing us to examine how various strategic motives for nonparticipation affect cooperation. Using replicator dynamics, we find that cooperation thrives only when nonparticipants are motivated by individualistic or prosocial values, with individualistic motivations yielding optimal cooperation. These findings are robust to mutation, which slightly enlarges the region where cooperation can be maintained through cyclic dominance among strategies. Our results suggest that while optional participation can benefit cooperation, its effectiveness is limited and highlights the limitations of bottom-up schemes in supporting public goods.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevE.111.024306
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevE.111.024306
M3 - Article
C2 - 40103097
AN - SCOPUS:85217812946
SN - 2470-0045
VL - 111
JO - Physical Review E
JF - Physical Review E
IS - 2
M1 - 024306
ER -