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Home / Papers / Evolution of prosocial behaviours in multilayer populations

Evolution of prosocial behaviours in multilayer populations

102 Citations2022
Qi Su, Alex McAvoy, Yoichiro Mori

It is found that coupling between distinct domains of social interaction is critical for the spread of prosociality in human societies, and across a diverse space of structures, coupling between layers tends to promote prosocial behavior.

Abstract

Human societies include diverse social relationships. Friends, family, business colleagues and online contacts can all contribute to one's social life. Individuals may behave differently in different domains, but success in one domain may engender success in another. Here, we study this problem using multilayer networks to model multiple domains of social interactions, in which individuals experience different environments and may express different behaviours. We provide a mathematical analysis and find that coupling between layers tends to promote prosocial behaviour. Even if prosociality is disfavoured in each layer alone, multilayer coupling can promote its proliferation in all layers simultaneously. We apply this analysis to six real-world multilayer networks, ranging from the socio-emotional and professional relationships in a Zambian community, to the online and offline relationships within an academic university. We discuss the implications of our results, which suggest that small modifications to interactions in one domain may catalyse prosociality in a different domain.