Cooperation and Group Size in the N-Person Prisoners' Dilemma
- 1 December 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Conflict Resolution
- Vol. 20 (4) , 687-706
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002200277602000406
Abstract
This study explores the relationship between group size and member cooperation when individual and group interests conflict. Existing theories incorrectly imply that larger groups should experience more difficulty in providing “public goods” (goods whose benefits are not confined to the purchaser). A theoretically based typology that identifies nine systematic patterns associated with changes in group size and parameters of individual and group payoff structure is presented. The typology describes nine different ways in which group size can affect cooperation in the provision of public goods. In a computer-administered experiment using three of these nine types and group sizes of three, six, and nine, 90 college students were given sequences of opportunities to choose between “cooperation” (which benefited everyone) and “noncooperation” (which benefited the chooser but harmed everyone else). For one of these types, a counter-intuitive but theoretically predicted positive relationship between group size and cooperation was found. Two explanations for a theoretically unexpected negative relation between group size and cooperation in the other conditions are developed, one based on Steiner's concept of a conjunctive task, the other based on the decreasing information value of responses in larger groups.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Group Size and CooperationJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1975
- Rationality, the Prisoner's Dilemma, and Population1Journal of Social Issues, 1974
- Take Some—A format and family of gamesBehavioral Science, 1974
- N‐person Prisoner's Dilemma†The Journal of Mathematical Sociology, 1973
- Noninteraction in an anonymous three-person prisoner's dilemma gameBehavioral Science, 1973
- Collective action as an agreeable n-prisoners' dilemmaBehavioral Science, 1971
- Social interaction basis of cooperators' and competitors' beliefs about others.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1970
- Separable GamesBehavioral Science, 1969
- The Tragedy of the CommonsScience, 1968
- Collaboration among six persons in a Prisoner's Dilemma gameJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1966