Publications by authors named "J S Plotkin"

Article Synopsis
  • Traditional social learning models suggest that individuals imitating successful neighbors rely on simple contagion, often needing only one interaction to change behavior.
  • The study introduces a new framework that incorporates both simple payoff-biased imitation and complex contagion, allowing for multiple exposures before individuals decide to alter their behavior.
  • This updated model produces distinct outcomes in various games (like the Prisoner’s Dilemma and Coordination game) compared to traditional models, revealing how social behaviors can evolve in more realistic ways based on the interplay between contagion complexity and imitation bias.
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Striatal cholinergic interneurons (CINs) activate nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on dopamine axons to extend the range of dopamine release. Here we show that synchronous activation of CINs induces and extends the range of local serotonin release via a similar mechanism. This process is exaggerated in the hypercholinergic striatum of a mouse model of OCD-like behavior, implicating CINs as critical regulators of serotonin levels in the healthy and pathological striatum.

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Reputations are critical to human societies, as individuals are treated differently based on their social standing. For instance, those who garner a good reputation by helping others are more likely to be rewarded by third parties. Achieving widespread cooperation in this way requires that reputations accurately reflect behaviour and that individuals agree about each other's standings.

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Previous research has shown how indirect reciprocity can promote cooperation through evolutionary game theoretic models. Most work in this field assumes a separation of time-scales: individuals' reputations equilibrate at a fast time scale for given frequencies of strategies while the strategies change slowly according to the replicator dynamics. Much of the previous research has focused on the behaviour and stability of equilibria for the replicator dynamics.

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Humans update their social behavior in response to past experiences and changing environments. Behavioral decisions are further complicated by uncertainty in the outcome of social interactions. Faced with uncertainty, some individuals exhibit risk aversion while others seek risk.

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