recipitis
Recipitis is a theoretical construct used in social science and network theory to quantify the extent to which agents engage in reciprocal exchanges. It describes the propensity to return benefits, favors, or resources in response to received ones, and is used to compare reciprocity dynamics across individuals, groups, or systems. In this framework, recipitis can be represented as a dimensionless score or rate that reflects both the likelihood and scale of reciprocation, adjusted for timing, transaction type, and strategic context.
Origin and usage: The term recipitis is a modern coinage within discussions of reciprocity and cooperation.
Measurement: Researchers compute recipitis from interaction histories. Common approaches include calculating the ratio of returned exchanges
Interpretation and applications: A higher recipitis is typically associated with cooperative norms, stronger trust, and resilience
Limitations: The concept relies on explicit accounting of exchanges and can overlook nonmaterial or indirect forms