Simulating Irrational Human Behavior to Prevent Resource Depletion
Authored by Daniel Strombom, Petter Holme, Sungmin Lee, Anna Sircova, Fariba Karimi, Evgeny N Osin
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0117612
Sponsors:
Korean National Research Foundation (NRF)
Swedish Research Council
Basic Research Program of the National Research University Higher School of Economics (ENO)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
In a situation with a limited common resource, cooperation between
individuals sharing the resource is essential. However, people often act
upon self-interest in irrational ways that threaten the long-term
survival of the whole group. A lack of sustainable or environmentally
responsible behavior is often observed. In this study, we examine how
the maximization of benefits principle works in a wider social
interactive context of personality preferences in order to gain a more
realistic insight into the evolution of cooperation. We used time
perspective (TP), a concept reflecting individual differences in
orientation towards past, present, or future, and relevant for making
sustainable choices. We developed a personality-driven agent-based model
that explores the role of personality in the outcomes of social dilemmas
and includes multiple facets of diversity: (1) The agents have different
behavior strategies: individual differences derived by applying cluster
analysis to survey data from 22 countries (N = 10,940) and resulting in
7 cross-cultural profiles of TP; (2) The non-uniform distribution of the
types of agents across countries; (3) The diverse interactions between
the agents; and (4) diverse responses to those interactions in a
well-mixed population. As one of the results, we introduced an index of
overall cooperation for each of the 22 countries, which was validated
against cultural, economic, and sustainability indicators (HDI, dimensions of national culture, and Environment Performance Index). It
was associated with higher human development, higher individualism, lower power distance, and better environmental performance. The findings
illustrate how individual differences in TP can be simulated to predict
the ways people in different countries solve the personal vs. common
gain dilemma in the global limited-resource situation. This
interdisciplinary approach to social simulation can be adopted to
explain the possible causes of global environmental issues and to
predict their possible outcomes.
Tags
Cooperation
Attitudes
social dilemmas
Pro-environmental behavior
Time perspective