Effects of deception in social networks.

Honesty plays a crucial role in any situation where organisms exchange information or resources. Dishonesty can thus be expected to have damaging effects on social coherence if agents cannot trust the information or goods they receive. However, a distinction is often drawn between prosocial lies (&#...

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Main Authors: Iñiguez, G, Govezensky, T, Dunbar, R, Kaski, K, Barrio, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Royal Society of London 2014
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author Iñiguez, G
Govezensky, T
Dunbar, R
Kaski, K
Barrio, R
author_facet Iñiguez, G
Govezensky, T
Dunbar, R
Kaski, K
Barrio, R
author_sort Iñiguez, G
collection OXFORD
description Honesty plays a crucial role in any situation where organisms exchange information or resources. Dishonesty can thus be expected to have damaging effects on social coherence if agents cannot trust the information or goods they receive. However, a distinction is often drawn between prosocial lies ('white' lies) and antisocial lying (i.e. deception for personal gain), with the former being considered much less destructive than the latter. We use an agent-based model to show that antisocial lying causes social networks to become increasingly fragmented. Antisocial dishonesty thus places strong constraints on the size and cohesion of social communities, providing a major hurdle that organisms have to overcome (e.g. by evolving counter-deception strategies) in order to evolve large, socially cohesive communities. In contrast, white lies can prove to be beneficial in smoothing the flow of interactions and facilitating a larger, more integrated network. Our results demonstrate that these group-level effects can arise as emergent properties of interactions at the dyadic level. The balance between prosocial and antisocial lies may set constraints on the structure of social networks, and hence the shape of society as a whole.
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spelling oxford-uuid:d5df030b-ad8f-479e-acb8-54c635770cf42022-03-27T08:29:08ZEffects of deception in social networks.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:d5df030b-ad8f-479e-acb8-54c635770cf4EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordRoyal Society of London2014Iñiguez, GGovezensky, TDunbar, RKaski, KBarrio, RHonesty plays a crucial role in any situation where organisms exchange information or resources. Dishonesty can thus be expected to have damaging effects on social coherence if agents cannot trust the information or goods they receive. However, a distinction is often drawn between prosocial lies ('white' lies) and antisocial lying (i.e. deception for personal gain), with the former being considered much less destructive than the latter. We use an agent-based model to show that antisocial lying causes social networks to become increasingly fragmented. Antisocial dishonesty thus places strong constraints on the size and cohesion of social communities, providing a major hurdle that organisms have to overcome (e.g. by evolving counter-deception strategies) in order to evolve large, socially cohesive communities. In contrast, white lies can prove to be beneficial in smoothing the flow of interactions and facilitating a larger, more integrated network. Our results demonstrate that these group-level effects can arise as emergent properties of interactions at the dyadic level. The balance between prosocial and antisocial lies may set constraints on the structure of social networks, and hence the shape of society as a whole.
spellingShingle Iñiguez, G
Govezensky, T
Dunbar, R
Kaski, K
Barrio, R
Effects of deception in social networks.
title Effects of deception in social networks.
title_full Effects of deception in social networks.
title_fullStr Effects of deception in social networks.
title_full_unstemmed Effects of deception in social networks.
title_short Effects of deception in social networks.
title_sort effects of deception in social networks
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AT dunbarr effectsofdeceptioninsocialnetworks
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AT barrior effectsofdeceptioninsocialnetworks