Data from: The narrow gap between norms and cooperative behaviour in a reindeer herding community

Cooperation evolves on social networks and is shaped, in part, by norms: beliefs and expectations about the behaviour of others or of oneself. Networks of cooperative social partners and associated norms are vital for pastoralists, such as Saami reindeer herders in northern Norway. However, little i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomas, Matthew Gwynfryn, Bårdsen, Bård-Jørgen, Næss, Marius Warg
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2018
Subjects:
psy
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.g44g3
Description
Summary:Cooperation evolves on social networks and is shaped, in part, by norms: beliefs and expectations about the behaviour of others or of oneself. Networks of cooperative social partners and associated norms are vital for pastoralists, such as Saami reindeer herders in northern Norway. However, little is known quantitatively about how norms structure pastoralists' social networks or shape cooperation. Saami herders reported their social networks and participated in field experiments, allowing us to gauge the overlap between reported and emergent cooperation. We show that individuals' perceptions of reciprocal cooperation within their social networks exceeded actual reciprocity, although both occurred frequently and were concentrated within herding groups. Herders with more extensive cooperation networks received more rewards in an economic game. Although herders overestimated reciprocal helping, cooperation in this community was still extensive, suggesting that perceived norms potentially allow network structures promoting cooperation to emerge and be maintained. Cleaned, processed data.zip file contains: (1) data about herders; (2) gift giving edgelist; (3) social network edgelist; (4) dyadic data.saami norms paper data.zip