nep-evo New Economics Papers
on Evolutionary Economics
Issue of 2026–03–30
two papers chosen by
Matthew Baker, City University of New York


  1. Playing Against the Machine: Cooperation, Communication, and Strategy Heterogeneity in Repeated Prisoner's Dilemma By Chowdhury Mohammad Sakib Anwar; Konstantinos Georgalos
  2. How to Identify Trust and Reciprocity: A Replication By L. Flóra Drucker; Dániel Horn; Sára Khayouti; Hubert János Kiss

  1. By: Chowdhury Mohammad Sakib Anwar; Konstantinos Georgalos
    Abstract: This paper investigates how natural language communication with an AI agent affects human cooperative behaviour in indefinitely repeated Prisoner's Dilemma games. We conduct a laboratory experiment (n = 126) with two between-subjects treatments varying whether human participants chat with an AI chatbot (GPT-5.2) before every round or only before the first round of each supergame, and benchmark against human-human data from Dvorak and Fehrler (2024) (n = 108). We find four main results. First, cooperation against the AI is high and initially comparable to human-human levels, but unlike in the human-human setting, where cooperation converges to near-complete levels, cooperation against the AI plateaus and never reaches full cooperation. Second, repeated communication, which substantially increases cooperation in human-human interactions, has no detectable effect in the human-AI setting. Third, strategy estimation reveals that human-AI subjects favour Grim Trigger under pre-play communication and remain dispersed under repeated communication, whereas human-human subjects converge to Tit-for-Tat and unconditional cooperation respectively. Fourth, human-AI conversations contain more explicit strategy commitments but fewer emotional and social messages. These results suggest that humans cooperate with AI at high rates but do not develop the trust observed in human-human interactions. Cooperation in the human-AI setting is sustained through conditional rules rather than through the social bonds and mutual understanding that characterise human-human cooperation.
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2603.15852
  2. By: L. Flóra Drucker (Düsseldorf Institute for Competition Economics, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf); Dániel Horn (Corvinus University Budapest; ELTE Centre for Economic and Regional Studies); Sára Khayouti (University of Zürich); Hubert János Kiss (ELTE Centre for Economic and Regional Studies; Corvinus University Budapest)
    Abstract: We replicate the seminal three-games design introduced by Cox (2004) to disentangle trust and reciprocity from other-regarding preferences in the classic trust game. This study marks the first attempt to replicate these findings using a non-university sample. Our experiment was conducted online via Prolific, with participants based in the United States. In the original study, Cox (2004) found that senders in a treatment where receivers could not send back any money sent less than in the classical trust game, suggesting that sender behavior reflects a combination of other-regarding preferences and trust. This finding replicates in our experiment. However, the second finding does not replicate: receivers who automatically received money from senders did not send back significantly less than those in the classical trust game, where senders actively made the sending decision. Consequently, unlike Cox (2004), we find no clear distinction between other-regarding preferences and reciprocity.
    Keywords: trust game; reciprocity; trust; other-regarding preferences; experimental economics; replication
    JEL: C91 C93 D64 D03 Z13
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:has:discpr:2603

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