Publication | Closed Access
Intelligence, Personality, and Gains from Cooperation in Repeated Interactions
142
Citations
8
References
2018
Year
Evolutionary Game TheoryBehavioral Decision MakingGame TheorySocial InfluenceBehavioral Game TheorySocial SciencesPsychologyCollective Action ProblemExperimental EconomicsBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceRepeated InteractionsCooperation RatesBehavioral EconomicsExperimental MethodProfitable CooperationSocial BehaviorBusinessHuman-like IntelligenceCooperative Game TheoryIntergroup Cooperation
We study how intelligence and personality affect the outcomes of groups, focusing on repeated interactions that provide the opportunity for profitable cooperation. Our experimental method creates two groups of subjects who have different levels of certain traits, such as higher or lower levels of Intelligence, Conscientiousness, and Agreeableness, but who are very similar otherwise. Intelligence has a large and positive long-run effect on cooperative behavior. The effect is strong when at the equilibrium of the repeated game there is a trade-off between short-run gains and long-run losses. Conscientiousness and Agreeableness have a natural, significant but transitory effect on cooperation rates.
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