Abstract
Prejudicial attitudes are widely seen between human groups, with significant consequences. Actions taken in light of prejudice result in discrimination, and can contribute to societal division and hostile behaviours. We define a new class of group, the prejudicial group, with membership based on a common prejudicial attitude towards the out-group. It is assumed that prejudice acts as a phenotypic tag, enabling groups to form and identify themselves on this basis. Using computational simulation, we study the evolution of prejudicial groups, where members interact through indirect reciprocity. We observe how cooperation and prejudice coevolve, with cooperation being directed in-group. We also consider the co-evolution of these variables when out-group interaction and global learning are immutable, emulating the possible pluralism of a society. Diversity through three factors is found to be influential, namely out-group interaction, out-group learning and number of sub-populations. Additionally populations with greater in-group interaction promote both cooperation and prejudice, while global rather than local learning promotes cooperation and reduces prejudice. The results also demonstrate that prejudice is not dependent on sophisticated human cognition and is easily manifested in simple agents with limited intelligence, having potential implications for future autonomous systems and human-machine interaction.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Prejudice is a human attitude involving generally negative and unsubstantiated prejudgement of others. When acted upon, this results in wide-ranging behaviours such as sexism, ageism and discrimination against sexual preference1,2,3 through to ethnic, racial, nationalistic and religious extremism4,5, with bias and intergroup conflict characterised as a “problem of the century”6. Most recently, prejudice has been highlighted in connection to global political events: for example anti-immigration prejudice was a strong correlate of support for Brexit7.
The human disposition to categorize others through their group identity creates an opportunity for discrimination8,9,10. As a consequence of in-group formation11, which occurs through cultural or biological identification with others, or as a consequence of identity-less strangers mutually cooperating12, bias can take hold in two ways. Through in-group favoritism13,14,15,16, people prefer to help fellow group members, while out-group prejudice6,17,18 represents hostility to those beyond the in-group. These phenomena are easily triggered in human subjects under a wide range of transient experimental conditions8,13,16,19. This has contributed to a misperception that positive discrimination to the in-group and negative discrimination to the out-group are inevitable20.
Confusion arises between out-group prejudice and in-group favoritism because both concepts potentially reinforce the in-group, but as a consequence of different psychological mechanisms. While in-group favoritism is based on mutual attraction, out-group prejudice discounts the out-group by negatively accentuating differences. In-group favoritism does not depend on negatively biased attitudes, where as prejudice does. From a psychological perspective, this renders in-group favoritism insufficient to model prejudice. Consequently, understanding the separate roles of in-group and out-group discrimination is socially important6. In-group favoritism has received significant attention, but the evolution of out-group prejudice has received a more limited explicit focus.
Evolutionary game theory provides a powerful framework to examine the dynamics that can promote discriminatory behaviour14,15,21,22,23,24,25. In particular, tag based models15,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34 have shown that spontaneous cooperation can emerge from an agent’s donation being related to whether the recipient’s ‘tag’ is sufficiently similar to their own. Tags are arbitrary symbols upon which discrimination can be made, which must propagate with a behavioral strategy for cooperation to emerge. Groups of individuals can be defined through common tags where the model allows (e.g.15). This has established insights into in-group favoritism, particularly that the ability to discriminate between the in-group and out-group can actually promote cooperation, helping to explain why a predisposition toward in-group favoritism have evolved and can be easily triggered15.
Beyond tags, alternative models for studying the evolution of in-group favoritism are limited. Fu et al.14 provide an alternative generalised approach based on evolutionary set theory11 that permits out-group as well as in-group interactions. Tag based models generally prohibit this, other than in33,34 where although explicit groups are not defined, the model allows individual probabilities of cooperation with dis-similar others to evolve. Fu et al.14 allow agents to move between sets, with successful sets attracting members and successful strategies gaining imitators. Agents can also differentiate between in-group and out-group strategies and conditions are determined under which preferential in-group cooperation is favoured by selection.
A further relevant consideration is so-called parochial altruism35,36,37,38,39, where out-group discrimination has mainly been examined under coevolution with in-group favoritism. Both these costly discriminatory behaviours have been proposed as necessary for success in warfare35, possibly promoting their coevolution36. Parochial altruism is also observed as deeply embedded in human group behaviour37,39, although further clarification is needed on the analysis of the selective mechanisms at work in current models38.
While prejudice is common, its manifestation is fluid, indicating that culture and cultural evolution40 must play an important role in the evolution of bias, through socially transmitted beliefs that help to create and sustain groups. In previous related models, we note that discrimination is considered independently from a group’s identity. Typically, groups of individuals are modelled as a consequence of a common arbitrary tag, and evolution acts upon the agent’s discriminatory strategy in association with that tag. However humans have the capacity to directly identify with a discriminatory attitude as a phenotypic tag in its own right. As such, a discriminatory attitude towards the out-group can provide a common defining feature for a group. In other words, prejudicial (or non-prejudicial) views can act to bind a group and define its boundary. We note that prejudicial feelings towards other groups have been predicted as a consequence of the perceived threat that they pose41. Also, at the extremes of group identity, common out-group prejudicial attitudes, from within a larger population, are a particular feature of homophilic attraction and group identity (e.g.42,43).
Accordingly, in this paper we introduce and study the evolution of a new abstract class of group, the prejudicial group, defined by the common prejudicial disposition of its members towards the out-group. We assume that a population of agents is composed of sub-populations, each denoted SPt, where the agents in SPt have the common immutable trait t. A prejudicial group \({G}_{t,\alpha }\) within a sub-population SPt represents the maximal subset of agents with a common prejudicial attitude (α) to the out-group. We use i to index the particular parameter values held by an agent i, with ti indicating i’s trait and αi indicating i’s prejudice level. Therefore ti = t and αi = α if and only if agent i is a member of Gt,α. An out-group member is any agent not carrying both the prejudicial attitude value α and trait t. This arrangement gives a simple representation of features such as nationalism, or political, ideological, religious or extremist convictions within a sub-population. People who are less favourable to one out-group tend to be less favourable to other out-groups44, and therefore we do not distinguish between them: an agent’s prejudice level αi is equally applied to all out-groups. The groups \({G}_{t,\alpha }\) partition the sub-population SPt, so that every agent belongs to precisely one group. For experimental purposes we assume α ∈ {0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1}.
Our aim is to observe how αi evolves with cooperation, and to further understand the conditions that promote or impede αi. We seek to achieve this in a context aligned with observed human behaviour. Across all species, only humans fully engage with indirect reciprocity23,45 making it an appropriate cooperative scenario to consider46. Indirect reciprocity is commonly examined using the donation game, a special case of the mutual aid game47, where agents choose whether or not to donate at cost c to a recipient who gains benefit b > c > 0, without the guarantee of future reciprocation.
Strategies for indirect reciprocity are generally driven by reputation46,48, which acts as a currency to judge third party agents who may never be encountered again. While a range of evolutionary approaches to sustaining indirect reciprocity are known22,46,49,50, the social comparison of reputation between a donor and the recipient has recently been developed25, where the heuristic of donating to those with similar or higher reputation evolves to sustain cooperation. This is of high relevance to prejudice because social comparison is a widespread human disposition51,52,53,54,55 that plays a fundamental role in categorization8,9,10 and subsequent stereotyping18. Therefore we extend this model25 to incorporate prejudicial attitudes against out-group agents, allowing agents to discount the reputation of out-group members by a factor of αi when considering whether or not to donate.
The model we develop involves 100 agents, which are randomly selected to play the donation game 5000 times, and which constitutes one generation, before evolution of the agents’ strategy. Reputation is central to the model, and assessment rules are applied to update a donating agent’s reputation in light of their donation behavior immediately after each donation game. Assessment rules represent social norms, which humans are well-disposed to internalising and perpetuating56,57,58. These enable the judgement of reward and penalty, which are a basis for modelling morality59. Because prejudicial groups are defined by the common out-group prejudicial disposition of their members, it is appropriate to model an in-group reputation for each agent i, denoted \({r}_{i}^{G}\), as well as a universal reputation for agent i, denoted \({r}_{i}^{U}\), which is the hypothetical reputation in the absence of any prejudice or groups. This approach applies social norms both locally and globally.
Wide-ranging assessment rules have been previously studied22,60,61,62,63,64, however standing62, with its origins in the work of Sugden60, has emerged as one of the dominant approaches because it permits “legitimate shirking”. Here, an agent’s reputation is not reduced when there is a justified basis for defection (e.g., the potential recipient is a defector). We apply a generalised form of standing for both in-group and universal reputations, where a reputation is permitted to range between −5 and +5 in unit steps, as employed in49. This choice is based on the analysis conducted in25, where the moral conventions of judging, image scoring and standing were compared, allowing evolution to act upon all possible social comparison action rules. These results indicated that either standing or judging are preferential rules, and this comes from their ability to ensure those agents who are limited in their cooperation are not rewarded.
Both the in-group and universal reputations are conceptually simple but require a number of criteria to update them in light of the donation or defection behaviour by an agent i. Both types of reputation follow the principles of standing. Specifically, \({r}_{i}^{U}\) and \({r}_{i}^{G}\) are incremented when the donor i cooperates. For the universal reputation, if agent i defects on agent j, whose reputation is of relatively low standing (i.e., \({r}_{j}^{U}\) is lesser than \({r}_{i}^{U}\)), then this is deemed legitimate and i suffers no penalty to its reputation (i.e., \({r}_{i}^{U}\) remains unchanged). However if i defects on agent j and this isn’t deemed legitimate (i.e., \({r}_{j}^{U}\) is the same or greater than \({r}_{i}^{U}\)) then i’s universal reputation is decremented.
Concerning in-group reputation, when i and j belong to the same group \({G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}\), the updating of \({r}_{i}^{G}\) is analogous to updating the universal reputation, but through comparing \({r}_{i}^{G}\) with \({r}_{j}^{G}\). However, when j is out-group, prejudice comes into play and i’s in-group reputation is compared with j’s universal reputation as discounted by i’s prejudice level. If i defects and j’s discounted reputation \({r}_{j}^{U}\cdot \mathrm{(1}-{\alpha }_{i})\) is less than \({r}_{i}^{G}\) then this is deemed legitimate by i’s in-group and i’s in-group reputation remains unchanged, otherwise \({r}_{i}^{G}\) is decremented. Note that in-group reputation may deviate from universal reputation as a consequence of prejudice.
The donation behavior of each agent i (i.e., the action rule) is governed by a social comparison heuristic, denoted Hi = (si, ui, di, αi, Pi, Si). Upon being selected to play, an agent i randomly determines its potential recipient j, using the probability Si to determine whether j is selected from in-group (with probability 1 − Si that i is selected from an out-group). Variables si, ui, di and αi allow a donor agent i to compare its reputation against that of the potential recipient j, and to make the donation decision.
An agent i plays a donation game by comparing its reputation against that of j, and three outcomes are possible. Assuming i and j are in the same group, these are similarity \(({r}_{j}^{G}={r}_{i}^{G})\), upward self-comparison \(({r}_{j}^{G} > {r}_{i}^{G})\), or downward self-comparison \(({r}_{j}^{G} < {r}_{i}^{G})\). The reputation \({r}_{j}^{G}\) is replaced with \({r}_{j}^{U}\cdot \mathrm{(1}-{\alpha }_{i})\) in these comparisons when j is out-group to i. The binary variables from i’s social comparison heuristic govern whether or not i donates when similarity (si), upward comparison (ui) or downward comparison (di) is observed by i in respect of j. On closure of a generation, a reproductive step conducts natural selection on the social comparison heuristics. Similar to approaches used in a spatial context (e.g.15,65), we limit the opportunity for each agent’s reproduction at an evolutionary step to be 10%. This controls potential genetic drift due to selection from within small sub-populations, and the reproductive step is repeated over 50,000 generations, unless otherwise stated. At each reproductive step, if selected to reproduce, an agent i chooses another agent’s social comparison heuristic to copy. Based on the Island model49,66, copying may be local (i.e., from within the in-group) with probability Pi or from the whole population (with probability 1 − Pi). Agent i then selects a new social comparison heuristic with chance proportional to the relative fitness of the in-group members or the whole population, while further applying a random mutation to each element of the agent’s new social comparison heuristic, at the rate of 1%25. The fitness of an agent is taken as the cumulative difference between the benefits received and costs paid since the previous reproductive step. This genetic reproduction extends that applied in previous work25, and follows the general approach of asexual reproduction49.
Note that the reproductive process represents a way in which an agent i effectively learns from others, by probabilistic copying, based on the proportional fitness. Pi controls the extend to which this learning is in-group, where only the strategies (i.e., social comparison heuristics) of agents in the same group \({G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}\) are considered. When Pi is low, agent i has a greater chance of learning from beyond its own group, across the wider population. For various experiments Pi and Si may be exogenously fixed, enabling the influence of these variables to be assessed. A summary of the key parameters is presented in Table 1. The subtle dynamics underlying donation and reputation systems impede formal analysis (such as evolutionary stable strategies), but as in wide ranging studies where this is also the case15,25,26,65,67, we employ agent-based simulation. A summary of the pseudocode is also presented in Fig. 1.
Results
Firstly we investigate the emergence of prejudicial groups when all variables in an agent’s social comparison heuristic are permitted to evolve. We partition the population into 5 equal sub-populations and consider evolution over 100,000 generations. Figure 2 shows how agents become in-group focussed in three dimensions. Natural selection of players focuses interactions on the in-group (high Si), accompanied with the emergence of prejudice (presence of high αi), which occurs within 10,000 generations. At the same time, in-group learning rapidly emerges (high Pi) - aligning a choice of strategy with in-group selection.
Prejudice enters the population through mutation. Agents with strategies that discount the out-group reduce their risk of making donations that may not be reciprocated. As the presence of prejudicial groups increases, agents with a non-prejudicial disposition or an out-group focus for interaction become more exposed to free-riding recipients, because reciprocation has a limited chance of occurring from prejudicial out-groups. This further promotes prejudice, with in-group learning (Pi) ensuring that agents avoid risking a strategy that has been successful in the context of a different group’s behaviour. Interestingly, although considerable prejudice is evident, cooperation rapidly evolves, and the social comparison heuristic of di = 0, si = 1 and ui = 1 dominates, consistent with previous research25.
Prejudice and cooperation are often perceived as antagonistic forces. However the results show how cooperation coevolves with prejudice, specifically that prejudice discounts cooperation from the out-group and restricts it to the in-group. Figure 2 also shows that this doesn’t come without a cost. Although Si evolves to preference in-group selection of players for the donation game, opportunities to receive donations from an out-group are lost (Fig. 2(d)), with higher prejudicial groups proportionally contributing the most to this loss.
The experiments reported in Fig. 2 allow natural selection to act on all variables in an agent’s social comparison heuristic. However, two variables in particular are open to exogenous influence: the tendency for in-group interaction (Si) and the extent of in-group learning (Pi) verses global learning. These factors abstractly reflect the pluralism of a society, being influenced by issues beyond the individual, such as social policy, government, historical conflict, culture, religion and the media. To further investigate the nature of prejudicial groups, we proceed by considering Si and Pi as external variables that are set by context (i.e., specified and fixed by the experiment) rather than free to be chosen by natural selection. This allows observation of prejudicial groups assuming different pluralistic scenarios. In particular, it allows us to understand the role of interactions and social learning as variables that contribute to the emergence and mitigation of prejudice.
Cooperation, prejudice and pluralism
Figure 3 shows how prejudice and cooperation is sustained in terms of Pi and Si when they remain fixed during the simulation, for all agents. This assumes that the extent of pluralism, in terms of interaction and learning, is set by the external context. Lower levels of in-group mixing are necessary to attain lower levels of average prejudice (Fig. 3a), and this is most effective when the chance of global learning is high (low Pi). Cooperation generally benefits from higher in-group mixing (Fig. 3b), which is compounded by increased global learning (low Pi). High in-group mixing reduces the opportunity for cooperation to be diminished by prejudice. The exception here are extreme circumstances (e.g., Si < 0.2 and Pi ≤ 0.5) where there is limited opportunity for a prejudicial group to gain utility from in-group interactions. The relationship between cooperation and prejudice is further mapped throughout the results.
Small mutations are sufficient to cause prejudicial groups
Susceptibility to prejudice can be considered by the extent to which a small chance of mutation in an agent’s αi value, given an initially non-prejudicial population (∀i, αi = 0), is sufficient to trigger more widespread prejudicial attitudes in conditions where prejudice can emerge (Fig. 3a, Si ≥ 0.2). This can be examined by considering a population with low pluralism, such as one with little out-group interaction (e.g., Si = 0.8) and high in-group learning (e.g., Pi = 0.9), consistent with Leimar et al49.
We consider these fixed values for Si and Pi. All agents are initially prejudice free (αi = 0,∀i) and Fig. 4a shows the resultant prejudicial characteristics. Mutation at a rate of μ = 1/100 creates prejudicial individuals relatively infrequently, but when a small number of such individuals occur with the same prejudice level, a non-trivial group can establish itself. Prejudicial individuals prosper by building a strong in-group reputation, while retaining resources rather than donating to the out-group. This limits their universal reputation and limits the extent of donations received from the out-group. When there is dominance of in-group interactions (e.g., Si = 0.8), this is not an impediment to their payoff and it also reduces their costs.
Even when in-group mixing is lower (e.g., Si = 0.4) it is still sufficient for prejudicial groups to establish themselves. Cooperation through in-group interaction involves social comparison heuristics with si = ui = 1 and di = 0 emerging as prevalent, which limit an agent’s exposure to those of lower standing within the group, offering relative protection against shirkers, consistent with previous findings25. Non-prejudicial groups become relatively disadvantaged when prejudice is present, as they are susceptible to making out-group donations without reciprocation. This leads to the emergence of defection (i.e., si = ui = di = 0) as the preferential strategy for these groups.
High levels of out-group interaction suppress prejudice irrespective of global learning
When out-group interactions are high (i.e., Si is fixed as low), agents become increasingly dependent on the out-group for donation of resources, and universal reputation becomes important. Agents discriminating through prejudice are less likely to make out-group donations, restricting their opportunity to build a high universal reputation that is attractive to out-group donors, impeding the payoff for prejudicial group members. This gives advantage to lower prejudice agents.
Figure 4b shows an example of the evolution of groups under high rates of out-group interaction (Si = 0.1). In contrast to Figure 4a, which is exactly equivalent other than for the setting of Si (Si = 0.9), Figure 4b shows that extensive out-group interactions are sufficient to promote non-prejudicial groups that are more cooperative.
Even when opportunities for mixing are limited, prejudice can be mitigated through learning
Societies which are in-group focused with their interactions can still mitigate prejudice through learning from the wider population. Figure 3a shows that for all Si, when out-group learning increases (Pi is reduced), the average frequency of prejudice is diminished. This exposes agents to a wider range of strategies for selection. However reducing Pi also results in a greater variance in prejudice level frequency (S.D. in the range [0.3, 0.4] when Pi = 0.3, Pi = 0.5 and Si ≥ 0.2; S.D. in the range [0.003, 0.076] when Si < 0.2; S.D. in the range [0.071, 0.18] when Pi = 0.9). This is consistent with the population structure having a lesser effect on impeding genetic drift49, resulting in sporadic instances of highly prejudicial agents. This occurs alongside strategies in lower prejudice groups that are successful through maintaining a high universal reputation.
Widespread prejudice is challenging to reverse: trait diversity helps
For a fully prejudicial population, we consider the conditions required to reverse prejudice, focusing on the role of fixed traits as provided by sub-populations. In the initial population we assume that all agents are entirely prejudicial (αi = 1 ∀i) and we explore to what extent prejudice diminishes when the number of fixed traits (i.e., sub-populations) is varied, as shown in Figure 5. We exogenously control for Si and Pi. From previous experimentation (Figure 3) prejudice mitigation is most likely to occur under conditions of high out-group mixing (e.g., Si < 0.2). Figure 5a shows that as the number of fixed traits increases, the average level of agent prejudice decreases, but this requires very high out-group mixing (Si = 0.1). Figure 5b shows the cumulative frequency of prejudicial attitudes as the number of fixed traits increase.
Throughout, we evenly split in-group and global learning (Pi = 0.5) for all agents. A mutation rate of μ = 1/100 is adopted, being sufficient to trigger the infrequent coexistence of non-prejudicial agents, which form a non-trivial group. When these conditions are present with a single sub-population (i.e., one fixed trait), members of the non-prejudicial group are initially unable to receive donations from any out-group interactions. This constraint is removed when two sub-populations (i.e., two fixed traits) are introduced.
This effect generalises: if we consider a fixed number of total non-prejudicial agents at a particular point in time, as the number of fixed traits (i.e., sub-populations) increase, the non-prejudicial agents can occur with different traits. Therefore the number of non-prejudicial out-group members increase. This means that each non-prejudicial agent has a greater chance of receiving a donation from a non-prejudicial out-group member, increasing the payoff for non-prejudicial agents. As a result, increasing the number of traits promotes lower prejudice.
Prejudice emerges more easily when group sizes are imbalanced
Previous work concerning the analysis of intolerance under economic stress68 identified that it is easier for intolerance to emerge in minorities (i.e., when groups have different sizes). This involved consideration of the leading eight strategies50 over two groups. We investigate the extent to which difference in group size has a similar effect in the context of prejudicial behaviours.
In Figure 6 we examine the evolution of two non-prejudicial groups, each involving a different fixed trait. Using two scenarios, we compare the effect of varying the initial group size, evenly splitting the agents in one scenario and splitting them 90/10 in the other. Group evolution is particularly sensitive to the extent of in-group learning (Pi), and a degree of out-group interaction has to be present for effects to be observed. Figure 6 shows that when Pi allows a mix of learning from the in-group and the wider population (e.g., Pi = 0.5), imbalance in group size leads to significantly greater prejudice. This is because any economic advantage from being prejudicial has a greater chance of been copied in-group in a smaller group, purely as a consequence of the smaller group size. Consequently prejudicial views rapidly spread in the smaller sub-population, creating prejudicial groups. The presence of global learning then promotes prejudice in the larger sub-population involving the other trait. This is not seen when the initial sub-groups have the same size.
In-group mixing and global learning both promote cooperation, but with opposing implications for prejudice
Other than for the extreme circumstances (e.g., Si < 0.2 and Pi ≤ 0.5) where there is limited opportunity for a prejudicial group to gain utility from in-group interactions, attaining cooperation invokes prejudice in some form. We explore this by exogenously controlling for Si and Pi, and examining how prejudice and cooperation co-evolve. Figure 7 shows cooperation as a function of prejudice from two perspectives. Figure 7a shows that increasing in-group interactions promotes cooperation while also increasing prejudice and Figure 7b shows that greater levels of global learning promote cooperation, while also reducing prejudice.
These results implicitly show the roles of Si and Pi: in combination, they provide a trade-off in how cooperation can be achieved and show the role of interaction and learning in sustaining group attitudes. In terms of cooperation, high in-group mixing (high Si) can be compensated for through high levels of out-group learning (high Pi), and vice-versa. For example consider a total cooperation level of 0.7 in Figure 7b. This can be achieved with high out-group mixing (e.g., Si∈[0, 0.1]) and medium in-group learning (e.g., Pi = 0.5), which is accompanied by low prejudice levels (αI ∈ [0, 0.1]). Similar levels of cooperation can be attained with medium in-group mixing (e.g., Si ∈ [0.2, 0.7]) and low in-group learning (e.g., Pi = 0.3), which is accompanied by medium prejudice levels (αi ∈ [0.3, 0.4]). Furthermore, we can achieve the same cooperation with high in-group mixing (e.g., Si ∈ [0.8, 0.9]) and high in-group learning (e.g., Pi = 0.9), which is accompanied by high prejudice levels (αi ∈ [0.6, 0.7]) which reflect the in-group focus.
Note that all results involve a cost-to-benefit (c/b) ratio of 0.7. This is chosen based on analysis of the evolution of cooperation and social comparison25. This c/b ratio has been adopted because it is relatively conservative, in the sense that donation is a relatively costly action. Using a lower c/b ratio means that at the reproduction stage, less impact from defectors is apparent, because lower costs are incurred from donation to them. Therefore prejudicial strategies, that seek to benefit by not donating, provide less of an advantage. This means that alternative lower c/b ratios result in lower prejudice overall, if applied in this model.
Discussion
The model we have introduced allows computational exploration of how attitudes towards the out-group, not just behaviours, are sustained and evolve. In particular, the results provide insight into the origins of prejudicial groups as a consequence of natural selection. The model addresses the commonality of prejudicial attitudes as a phenotypic tag that identifies an ideological group. This allows a simple representation through which discriminatory (or non-discriminatory) groups may emerge within a sub-population, enabling modelling of concepts such as nationalism. The model complements previous work68 that has analytically studied the emergence of intolerance based on the leading eight donation strategies.
Our general approach involves an agent’s prejudice creating a differential between the reputations of the in-group and those of the out-group. In addition, prejudice provides a basis for an “in-group” to form in the first place, from a common prejudicial disposition. This is a new relationship between out-group discrimination and in-group formation, which is a key aspect of the model, as seen in elements of human behaviour. Note that in-group favoritism could also take hold in prejudicial groups. However, to isolate factors, we have considered the effects of a negative prejudicial bias, but additionally, a positive reputational bias aligned with in-group favoritism could be added. This would further promote the differential between in-group and out-group reputation. Considering the effects of in-group favoritism in prejudicial groups, beyond creating a reputation differential, is possible future work.
The model is based on indirect reciprocity22,49,62,69, a form of cooperation that strongly identifies with human behavior as compared to most other species. Indirect reciprocity is generally sustained by agents acting in response to the reputation of a third party23. In our model, agents undertake self-comparison of their reputation against that of the potential recipient, whose reputation is discounted by prejudice if they are out-group. Strategies for donation evolve based on self-comparison, alongside the evolution of an agent’s prejudice level, and an agent’s variables concerning the probabilities of in-group interaction and in-group (verses global) learning. At face value, the action rules that we adopt, based on social comparison, differ from the seminal work identifying the “leading eight”50. However in previous work we identified their close relationship with our approach25. The social norms (assessment rules) we employ are based on a generalisation of standing60,62, that are effective in supporting cooperation25. However, we note that alternative assessment rules, particularly within the context of extreme prejudicial groups, could be applied within our overall modelling framework.
While in-group favoritism has been studied through explicit models14 and as a consequence of the “green beard” effect in tag-based models15,26,27,28,29,30,31,32, out-group prejudice has received little explicit investigation, with it being easily conflated with in-group favoritism. To the best of our knowledge, only in33,34 are tag-based models presented that involve parameters to discount others based on dis-similarity, although prejudicial groups are not defined. Assignment errors often feature in tag-based (and other) models, which generally hinder the evolution of global cooperation levels and cooperation between individuals with different tags. It is possible that prejudice could be expressed through larger assignment errors, but forming groups on that basis would require them to be public. However this is an interesting possible future research direction.
The results in this work allow us to observe how prejudicial groups and cooperation co-evolve. Prejudice and cooperation are often considered to be opposing forces. However we find that they are concurrently sustained, but with significant structural consequences for the population. Prejudice directs cooperation into “islands”49 represented by groups holding the same out-group attitude. Thus prejudicial groups promote assortment with potential cooperators70, or at least reduce the risk of assortment with those of a perceived threat to defection41. While prejudice acts to reduce the risk of donating to groups that may not reciprocate, cooperation evolves in-group. This is combined with agents preferring to play the donation game in-group, and with learning at the evolutionary step predominantly copying in-group strategies, consistent with observations from the origins of the human population (e.g., Pi = 0.9)49. Also consistent with previous findings25, the dominant heuristic of donating to those with similar or greater reputation levels sustain cooperation emerges in-group. Although prejudice results in lost opportunities to receive out-group donations, this is mitigated through in-group cooperation.
Beyond the economics of payoff, it is important to note that in-group cooperation in lieu of cooperation across the wider population can have significant negative societal implications, occuring as a consequence of the resultant disconnected social network structure. When cooperation is restricted in-group, such groups tend to become increasingly isolated, interacting and learning predominantly from their own members. This disrupts social and cultural connectivity, supporting the “filter bubble” problem where isolated in-group communication affirms and reinforces the group’s own perspective without exposure to wider discourse71,72. Structurally, an in-group focus can also diminish the potential benefit from weak ties73, which impedes a wide range of societal and economic issues. For example, individuals may become restricted in their opportunity to create or exploit social capital from bridging74, limiting social mobility for group members75. More generally, the diversity of individuals’ relationships is strongly correlated with the economic development of communities76. In the context of organisational innovation, actors who can exploit weak ties have a greater source for ideas77, thereby exploiting diversity. We also note that strong external cultural factors can contribute to the tendency for agents to engage in out-group interaction and global learning, which may be slow to change, effectively being fixed over long durations.
Analysis of the leading eight donation strategies under two sub-populations68 shows that once intolerance invades one (or both) sub-populations, it becomes difficult to counter. Consistent with this, our results highlight that random instances of prejudice in agents are sufficient for prejudicial groups to become more widespread. After prejudicial groups become manifested in a sub-population, prejudicial attitudes spread as a means to prevent exploitation from the out-group. As a consequence, reversing prejudice is a significant challenge, and multiple factors have influence. Firstly, sub-population diversity increases the opportunity to counter prejudice, enabling out-group cooperation with non-prejudicial groups. Also societies based on high levels of out-group interaction and high levels of global learning provide mitigation. Critically, we also find that in-group mixing and global learning both promote co-operation, but with opposing implications for prejudice. This is the first known characterisation of such a relationship. Notably high levels of cooperation are possible, but with completely different interaction and learning behavior from agents.
An interesting feature of this study concerns the minimal cognitive ability of the agents involved. This decouples prejudice from the psychological and social capabilities that are distinctive in humans78,79,80, and through which prejudice is frequently explained in society. This is significant because research10,81,82,83,84,85 on how inter-group contact leads to attitude change is dependent on sophisticated cognition. In particular, the nature of contact through relationships, as perceived through higher order cognition, predicts prejudice in humans86,87,88. However, our model shows that prejudicial groups can easily manifest themselves through natural selection, as applied to agents with primitive cognitive abilities. Furthermore, we note that the pluralistic nature of the environment, in terms of embedded dispositions for out-group mixing, global learning, and the diversity of sub-populations, significantly influence how prejudicial groups evolve.
The findings of our research are also interesting in the context of machines and autonomous systems89, in particular for scenarios involving one-shot interactions and learning, where collectively, devices need to sustain cooperation by periodically benefiting from the resources of others, while not necessarily encountering them again. Examples of these scenarios are currently being considered in the context of future communications90,91 and may also emerge in future human-machine interaction92. Our study highlights the scope for prejudice to emerge in populations of autonomous machines that have simple cognitive abilities, such as being driven by local interactions and the assessment of others. This reaffirms that the distributed collective intelligence of machines is also a social endeavour, and it is potentially susceptible to prejudicial phenomena as seen in the human population.
Methods
We extend a framework concerning the evolution of indirect reciprocity from the social comparison of reputation25. The model involves a population of 100 agents, composed of sub-populations, each denoted SPt, where the agents in SPt are given a common immutable trait t. Each agent belongs to precisely one sub-population (see Agents and Groups Section). We vary the number of sub-populations for different experiments. Agents are randomly selected to play the donation game (see Action Rules Section), and the donor agent’s reputations are updated (see Assessment Rules Section). After 5000 donation games, which constitutes one generation, natural selection is performed (see Selection and Reproduction Section). This cycle is repeated for 50,000 generations unless otherwise stated. All results represent an average of 10 randomly seeded runs. We assume that all agents commence with zero prejudice (αi = 0), unless otherwise stated. Information on accessing data supporting the results is available93. A summary of the related pseudocode is presented in Figure 1.
Agents and Groups
Each agent i is represented by a social comparison heuristic denoted (si, ui, di, αi, Pi, Si). These are acted upon by evolution at the end of each generation, and they govern the donation and reproductive behavior of each individual. Each agent i remains in its original sub-population throughout the simulation, but may move between the prejudicial groups within that sub-population, as a consequence of the reproductive step.
Binary variables si, ui and di concern an agent’s action rules, which are well-understood in isolation25. These variables (action rules) are randomly initialised. αi represents the agent’s out-group prejudice level, where αi ∈ {0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1}. The prejudice level for an agent i is denoted αi. We set αi = 0, for all agents i, at the start of each generation, unless otherwise stated. Si and Pi range in the set {0, 0.1, …, 0.9} unless the experiment fixes Si and Pi. ti denotes the particular trait of the sub-population to which i belongs.
A prejudicial group \({G}_{t,\alpha }\) is the maximal subset of agents with the same trait t and prejudice level α. Therefore prejudicial groups partition each sub-population. An out-group member to \({G}_{t,\alpha }\) is any agent not carrying both the prejudicial attitude α and trait t. Agent i belongs to group Gt,α if and only if ti = t and αi = α.
The variable Si controls the selection of i’s potential recipient j for each donation game, determining the chance that j is selected from in-group. Pi determines the chance that i’s social comparison heuristic evolves based on the in-group (referred to as in-group learning), as compared to evolutionary influence from the whole population49. In numerous experiments we keep Si and Pi fixed, to understand their effect on the evolution of prejudicial groups.
Each agent maintains two reputations that are used to represent i’s reputation from an in-group perspective (\({r}_{i}^{G}\)) and a universal perspective that assumes no prejudice (\({r}_{i}^{U}\)). Reputations vary between −5 and +5 in integer steps25,49.
Action Rules
In each generation we perform 5000 random agent selections where each selected agent plays the donation game. Within a particular generation, assume that agent \(i\in {G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}\) is selected to play with j. The probability that j is selected from the in-group is Si. Otherwise j is selected from the out-group. Whether or not i donates is governed by si, ui and di, upon i comparing its reputation with that of j. If j is in-group (\(j\in {G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}})\) then i compares \({r}_{i}^{G}\) with \({r}_{j}^{G}\). Otherwise, when j is out-group, i compares \({r}_{i}^{G}\) with \({r}_{j}^{U}\cdot \mathrm{(1}-{\alpha }_{i})\), which is j’s reputation discounted by i’s prejudice.
Upon comparison, \({r}_{i}^{G}\) is either the smaller reputation (upward self-comparison from i), the greater reputation (downward self-comparison from i) or the comparison is equal (similarity). The binary variables from i's social comparison heuristic govern whether or not i donates in the presence of similarity (si), upward self-comparison (ui) or downward self-comparison (di). When \(i\in {G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}\), \(|{G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}|=1\), and i is selected to play in-group, no cost is incurred and no donation is made.
The act of donation from agent i to j results in an economic transaction, with cost c to i and benefit b to j. From previous experimentation25 we assume a c/b ratio of 0.7. Within a generation, each agent i tracks its accumulation of benefits received less costs from donations (tpi).
Assessment Rules
Assessment rules are implemented immediately after action rules (i,e., after a donation game between agents i and j). Both the universal and in-group reputations are updated, based on generalised standing25. Standing follows the principle that donations increment reputation, and defection reduces reputation, unless there is a legitimate reason. In this case we adopt the reason to be that an agent determines the recipient’s reputation as less than their own.
Both \({r}_{i}^{U}\) and \({r}_{i}^{G}\) are incremented when the donor i cooperates. To update \({r}_{i}^{U}\), if agent i defects on j then \({r}_{i}^{U}\) is decremented unless \({r}_{j}^{U} < {r}_{i}^{U}\) (i.e., j is perceived to be less cooperative and of lower standing), in which case the universal reputation \({r}_{i}^{U}\) remains unchanged. An exactly analogous process is applied to update \({r}_{i}^{G}\) when i and j are in-group. When j is out-group to i and agent i defects on j, then \({r}_{i}^{G}\) is decremented unless \({r}_{j}^{U}\cdot \mathrm{(1}-{\alpha }_{i}) < {r}_{i}^{G}\) (i.e., j is perceived to be less cooperative and of lower standing than i, while also taking into account i’s out-group prejudice). At the beginning of a new generation, the in-group and universal reputations of all agents are reset to zero and reputations are assumed to be public, visible to all agents.
Selection and Reproduction
Each reproductive step occurs after 5000 randomly selected agent pairs have played the donation game (one generation). To counter potential genetic drift in small sub-populations, an agent’s chance of reproduction, at the reproductive step, is limited to 10%, which is similar to approaches applied in a spatial context (e.g.15,65). The reproductive step is repeated after each of 50,000 generations, unless otherwise stated.
At a reproductive step, all agents are considered for reproduction. If agent i is successful (10% chance), it copies the social comparison heuristic of another agent; otherwise agent i carries forward its current social comparison heuristic to the next generation.
To perform reproduction, the total payoff for an agent during a generation, denoted tpi, is defined as: the total benefit received from donations to i, less the total cost i has incurred in making donations. We let tp* denote the lowest negative value of total payoff across all agents i, in the current generation, with tp* = 0 if such a negative value of tp* doesn’t exist. Then the fitness fi for an agent i during a generation is defined as
where δ is a small constant. Throughout we apply δ = 1. Note that tp* and δ ensure that fitness is non-zero, while tpi provides a relative weighting based on payoff.
If agent i goes forward to update its social comparison heuristic, then agent i selects an agent j from which to copy, using relative fitness. Copying takes place from either the in-group (i.e., locally) with probability Pi, or from the whole population with probability 1 − Pi. This follows the Island model principle49,66, with Islands corresponding to prejudicial in-groups. If an agent \(i\in {G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}\) copies a social comparison heuristic from the in-group, then the probability of copying the social comparison heuristic of agent \(j\in {G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}\) is:
Alternatively if an agent \(i\in {G}_{{t}_{i},{\alpha }_{i}}\) copies a social comparison heuristic from the whole population of agents, denoted N, then the probability of copying the social comparison heuristic of agent j ∈ N is:
A random mutation to each element of the agent’s new social comparison heuristic (unless, in the case of Si and Pi, they are fixed by the experiment), at the rate of 1% across each variable25. This general clonal approach to reproduction is dependent on a single parent and is commonly used in previous studies on indirect reciprocity based on evolutionary simulation22,24,25,49.
References
Rudman, L. A., Moss-Racusin, C. A., Phelan, J. E. & Nauts, S. Status incongruity and backlash effects: Defending the gender hierarchy motivates prejudice against female leaders. J. Exp. Soc. Psychol. 48, 165–179 (2012).
Nelson, T. D. Ageism: Stereotyping and prejudice against older persons. (MIT press, 2004).
Herek, G. M. Confronting sexual stigma and prejudice: Theory and practice. J. Soc. Issues 63, 905–925 (2007).
Bar-Tal, D. & Teichman, Y. Stereotypes and prejudice in conflict: Representations of Arabs in Israeli Jewish society. (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
Bobo, L. Group conflict, prejudice, and the paradox of contemporary racial attitudes. In Eliminating racism, 85–114 (Springer, 1988).
Fiske, S. T. What we know now about bias and intergroup conflict, the problem of the century. Curr. Dir. Psychol. Sci. 11, 123–128 (2002).
Meleady, R., Seger, C. R. & Vermue, M. Examining the role of positive and negative intergroup contact and anti-immigrant prejudice in brexit. Br. J. Soc. Psychol. (2017).
Tajfel, H., Billig, M. G., Bundy, R. P. & Flament, C. Social categorization and intergroup behaviour. Eur. journal social psychology 1, 149–178 (1971).
Turner, J. C., Hogg, M. A., Oakes, P. J., Reicher, S. D. & Wetherell, M. S. Rediscovering the social group : A selfcategorization theory. (Basil Blackwell, 1987).
Dovidio, J. F., Gaertner, S. L. & Validzic, A. Intergroup bias: status, differentiation, and a common in-group identity. J. personality social psychology 75, 109 (1998).
Tarnita, C. E., Antal, T., Ohtsuki, H. & Nowak, M. A. Evolutionary dynamics in set structured populations. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 106, 8601–8604 (2009).
Gray, K. et al. The emergence of “us and them” in 80 lines of code: Modeling group genesis in homogeneous populations. Psychol. science 25, 982–990 (2014).
Balliet, D., Wu, J. & De Dreu, C. K. Ingroup favoritism in cooperation: A meta-analysis (2014).
Fu, F. et al. Evolution of in-group favoritism. Sci. reports 2, 460 (2012).
Hammond, R. A. & Axelrod, R. Evolution of contingent altruism when cooperation is expensive. Theor. population biology 69, 333–338 (2006).
Yamagishi, T., Jin, N. & Kiyonari, T. Bounded generalized reciprocity: Ingroup boasting and ingroup favoritism. Adv Gr Process. 16, 161–197 (1999).
Allport, G. W. The nature of prejudice. (Cambridge/Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1954).
Fiske, S. T. Stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination at the seam between the centuries: Evolution, culture, mind, and brain. Eur. J. Soc. Psychol. 30, 299–322 (2000).
Efferson, C., Lalive, R. & Fehr, E. The coevolution of cultural groups and ingroup favoritism. Sci. 321, 1844–1849 (2008).
Brewer, M. B. The psychology of prejudice: Ingroup love and outgroup hate? J. social issues 55, 429–444 (1999).
Smith, J. M. Evolution and the Theory of Games. (Cambridge university press, 1982).
Nowak, M. A. & Sigmund, K. Evolution of indirect reciprocity by image scoring. Nat. 393, 573–577 (1998).
Nowak, M. A. Five rules for the evolution of cooperation. science 314, 1560–1563 (2006).
Nowak, M. A. & Sigmund, K. The dynamics of indirect reciprocity. J. theoretical. Biol. 194, 561–574 (1998).
Whitaker, R. M., Colombo, G. B., Allen, S. M. & Dunbar, R. I. A dominant social comparison heuristic unites alternative mechanisms for the evolution of indirect reciprocity. Sci. Reports 6 (2016).
Riolo, R. L., Cohen, M. D. & Axelrod, R. Evolution of cooperation without reciprocity. Nat. 414, 441 (2001).
Roberts, G. & Sherratt, T. N. Behavioural evolution (communication arising): Does similarity breed cooperation? Nat. 418, 499 (2002).
Hales, D. Cooperation without memory or space: Tags, groups and the prisoner’s dilemma. In International Workshop on Multi-Agent Systems and Agent-Based Simulation, 157–166 (Springer, 2000).
Jansen, V. A. & Van Baalen, M. Altruism through beard chromodynamics. Nat. 440, 663 (2006).
Traulsen, A. & Nowak, M. A. Chromodynamics of cooperation in finite populations. PLoS One 2, e270 (2007).
Masuda, N. & Ohtsuki, H. Tag-based indirect reciprocity by incomplete social information. Proc. Royal Soc. Lond. B: Biol. Sci. 274, 689–695 (2007).
Antal, T., Ohtsuki, H., Wakeley, J., Taylor, P. D. & Nowak, M. A. Evolution of cooperation by phenotypic similarity. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 106, 8597–8600 (2009).
Colman, A. M., Browning, L. & Pulford, B. D. Spontaneous similarity discrimination in the evolution of cooperation. J. Theor. Biol. 299, 162–171 (2012).
Houy, N. Evolution of cooperation with similarity to an archetype. J. theoretical biology 332, 78–88 (2013).
Choi, J.-K. & Bowles, S. The coevolution of parochial altruism and war. science 318, 636–640 (2007).
Bowles, S. Being human: Conflict: Altruism’s midwife. Nat. 456, 326–327 (2008).
Bernhard, H., Fischbacher, U. & Fehr, E. Parochial altruism in humans. Nat. 442, 912 (2006).
Rusch, H. The evolutionary interplay of intergroup conflict and altruism in humans: a review of parochial altruism theory and prospects for its extension. Proc. Royal Soc. Lond. B: Biol. Sci. 281, 20141539 (2014).
Abbink, K., Brandts, J., Herrmann, B. & Orzen, H. Parochial altruism in inter-group conflicts. Econ. Lett. 117, 45–48 (2012).
Lumsden, C. J. & Wilson, E. O. Genes, mind, and culture: The coevolutionary process. (World Scientific, 1981).
Cottrell, C. A. & Neuberg, S. L. Different emotional reactions to different groups: a sociofunctional threat-based approach to “prejudice”. J. personality social psychology 88, 770 (2005).
Atran, S. The devoted actor: unconditional commitment and intractable conflict across cultures. Curr. Anthropol. 57, S192–S203 (2016).
Sheikh, H., Gómez, Á. & Atran, S. Empirical evidence for the devoted actor model. Curr. Anthropol. 57, S204–S209 (2016).
Duckitt, J. A dual-process cognitive-motivational theory of ideology and prejudice. Adv. experimental social psychology 33, 41–113 (2001).
Yoeli, E., Hoffman, M., Rand, D. G. & Nowak, M. A. Powering up with indirect reciprocity in a large-scale field experiment. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 110, 10424–10429 (2013).
Nowak, M. A. & Sigmund, K. Evolution of indirect reciprocity. Nat. 437, 1291–1298 (2005).
Panchanathan, K. & Boyd, R. Indirect reciprocity can stabilize cooperation without the second-order free rider problem. Nat. 432, 499–502 (2004).
Fehr, E. Human behaviour: don’t lose your reputation. Nat. 432, 449–450 (2004).
Leimar, O. & Hammerstein, P. Evolution of cooperation through indirect reciprocity. Proc. Royal Soc. Lond. B: Biol. Sci. 268, 745–753 (2001).
Ohtsuki, H. & Iwasa, Y. The leading eight: social norms that can maintain cooperation by indirect reciprocity. J. Theor. Biol. 239, 435–444 (2006).
Festinger, L. A theory of social comparison processes. Hum. relations 7, 117–140 (1954).
Buunk, A. P. & Gibbons, F. X. Social comparison: The end of a theory and the emergence of a field. Organ. Behav. Hum. Decis. Process. 102, 3–21 (2007).
Suls, J. M. & Miller, R. L. Social comparison processes: Theoretical and empirical perspectives. (Hemisphere, 1977).
Suls, J. & Wheeler, L. Handbook of social comparison: Theory and research. (Springer Science & Business Media, 2013).
Fiske, S. T. & Taylor, S. E. Social cognition: From brains to culture (Sage, 2013).
Chudek, M. & Henrich, J. Culture–gene coevolution, norm-psychology and the emergence of human prosociality. Trends Cogn. Sci. 15, 218–226 (2011).
Rand, D. G. & Nowak, M. A. Human cooperation. Trends Cogn. Sci. 17, 413–425 (2013).
De Waal, F. B. & Luttrell, L. M. Mechanisms of social reciprocity in three primate species: symmetrical relationship characteristics or cognition? Ethol. Sociobiol. 9, 101–118 (1988).
Alexander, R. D. The biology of moral systems. (Transaction Publishers, 1987).
Sugden, R. The economics of rights, co-operation and welfare. (Blackwell Oxford, 1986).
Wedekind, C. & Milinski, M. Cooperation through image scoring in humans. Sci. 288, 850–852 (2000).
Panchanathan, K. & Boyd, R. A tale of two defectors: the importance of standing for evolution of indirect reciprocity. J. Theor. Biol. 224, 115–126 (2003).
Brandt, H. & Sigmund, K. The logic of reprobation: assessment and action rules for indirect reciprocation. J. Theor. Biol. 231, 475–486 (2004).
Ohtsuki, H. & Iwasa, Y. How should we define goodness?–reputation dynamics in indirect reciprocity. J. Theor. Biol. 231, 107–120 (2004).
Axelrod, R. M. The evolution of cooperation. (Basic books, 2006).
Wright, S. Isolation by distance. Genet. 28, 114 (1943).
Axelrod, R. An evolutionary approach to norms. Am. political science review 80, 1095–1111 (1986).
Martinez-Vaquero, L. A. & Cuesta, J. A. Spreading of intolerance under economic stress: Results from a reputation-based model. Phys. Rev. E 90, 022805 (2014).
Boyd, R. & Richerson, P. J. The evolution of indirect reciprocity. Soc. Networks 11, 213–236 (1989).
Fletcher, J. A. & Doebeli, M. A simple and general explanation for the evolution of altruism. Proc. Royal Soc. Lond. B: Biol. Sci. 276, 13–19 (2009).
Bozdag, E. & van den Hoven, J. Breaking the filter bubble: democracy and design. Ethics Inf. Technol. 17, 249–265 (2015).
Pariser, E. The filter bubble: What the Internet is hiding from you. (Penguin UK, 2011).
Granovetter, M. S. The strength of weak ties. Soc. networks 347–367 (1977).
Lin, N. Building a network theory of social capital. In Social capital, 3–28 (Routledge, 2017).
Dominguez, S. & Watkins, C. Creating networks for survival and mobility: Social capital among african-american and latin-american low-income mothers. Soc. problems 50, 111–135 (2003).
Eagle, N., Macy, M. & Claxton, R. Network diversity and economic development. Sci. 328, 1029–1031 (2010).
Ruef, M. Strong ties, weak ties and islands: structural and cultural predictors of organizational innovation. Ind. Corp. Chang. 11, 427–449 (2002).
Barton, R. A. & Dunbar, R. I. Evolution of the social brain. Machiavellian intelligence II: Extensions evaluations 2, 240 (1997).
Dunbar, R. I. The social brain hypothesis. Evol. Anthropol. 178–190 (1998).
Dunbar, R. I. & Shultz, S. Evolution in the social brain. science 317, 1344–1347 (2007).
Tajfel, H. Social psychology of intergroup relations. Annu. review psychology 33, 1–39 (1982).
Pettigrew, T. F. Intergroup contact theory. Annu. review psychology 49, 65–85 (1998).
Pettigrew, T. F. & Tropp, L. R. Does intergroup contact reduce prejudice? recent meta-analytic findings. Reducing prejudice discrimination 93, 114 (2000).
Brewer, M. B. & Kramer, R. M. The psychology of intergroup attitudes and behavior. Annu. review psychology 36, 219–243 (1985).
Brown, R. & Hewstone, M. An integrative theory of intergroup contact. Adv. experimental social psychology 37, 255–343 (2005).
Paolini, S., Harwood, J. & Rubin, M. Negative intergroup contact makes group memberships salient: Explaining why intergroup conflict endures. Pers. Soc. Psychol. Bull. 36, 1723–1738 (2010).
Barlow, F. K. et al. The contact caveat: Negative contact predicts increased prejudice more than positive contact predicts reduced prejudice. Pers. Soc. Psychol. Bull. 38, 1629–1643 (2012).
Graf, S., Paolini, S. & Rubin, M. Negative intergroup contact is more influential, but positive intergroup contact is more common: Assessing contact prominence and contact prevalence in five central european countries. Eur. J. Soc. Psychol. 44, 536–547 (2014).
Sabater, J. & Sierra, C. Review on computational trust and reputation models. Artif. intelligence review 24, 33–60 (2005).
Allen, S. M., Chorley, M. J., Colombo, G. B. & Whitaker, R. M. Opportunistic social dissemination of micro-blogs. Ad Hoc Networks 10, 1570–1585 (2012).
Chun, Y. J. et al. Device-to-device communications: A performance analysis in the context of social comparison-based relaying. IEEE Transactions on Wirel. Commun. 16, 7733–7745 (2017).
Crandall, J. W. et al. Cooperating with machines. Nat. communications 9, 233 (2018).
Colombo, G. Evolutionary simulation of prejudicial groups. https://doi.org/10.17035/d.2018.0054105515 (2018).
Acknowledgements
This research was sponsored by the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the U.K. Ministry of Defence under Agreement Number W911NF-16-3-0001. The views and conclusions contained in this document are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the official policies, either expressed or implied, of the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, the U.S. Government, the U.K. Ministry of Defence or the U.K. Government. The U.S. and U.K. Governments are authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for Government purposes notwithstanding any copyright notation hereon. This research was also supported by the Supercomputing Wales project, which is part-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) via Welsh Government. This work was undertaken while D.G.R. was employed at Yale University. G.B.C. and R.M.W. undertook this work as members of the Cardiff University Crime and Security Research Institute.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
R.M.W. and D.G.R. are the principal investigators responsible for securing and managing the funding and research. All authors contributed to the model and experimental design. G.B.C. led the implementation of the simulations. All authors contributed to the analysis, writing and reviewing the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing Interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Whitaker, R.M., Colombo, G.B. & Rand, D.G. Indirect Reciprocity and the Evolution of Prejudicial Groups. Sci Rep 8, 13247 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-31363-z
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-31363-z
This article is cited by
-
Reputation structure in indirect reciprocity under noisy and private assessment
Scientific Reports (2022)
-
What Is the Function of Confirmation Bias?
Erkenntnis (2022)
-
The evolution of strongly-held group identities through agent-based cooperation
Scientific Reports (2021)
-
AI-based healthcare: a new dawn or apartheid revisited?
AI & SOCIETY (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.