Publication | Closed Access
EVOLUTION OF COOPERATION IN A SPATIAL PRISONER'S DILEMMA
102
Citations
41
References
2002
Year
NegotiationPattern FormationBehavioral SciencesNetwork ScienceEvolutionary Game TheoryNon-cooperative Game TheorySocial BehaviorGame TheorySpatial DistributionBusinessCooperative Game TheoryComputational Game TheoryGame ConfrontationGlobal FrequencyMechanism DesignCoexistence Regimes
We investigate the spatial distribution and the global frequency of agents who can either cooperate or defect. The agent interaction is described by a deterministic, non-iterated prisoner's dilemma game, further each agent only locally interacts with his neighbors. Based on a detailed analysis of the local payoff structures we derive critical conditions for the invasion or the spatial coexistence of cooperators and defectors. These results are concluded in a phase diagram that allows us to identify five regimes, each characterized by a distinct spatiotemporal dynamics and a corresponding final spatial structure. In addition to the complete invasion of defectors, we find coexistence regimes with either a majority of cooperators in large spatial domains, or a minority of cooperators organized in small non-stationary domains or in small clusters. The analysis further allowed a verification of computer simulation results by Nowak and May (1993). Eventually, we present simulation results of a true 5-person game on a lattice. This modification leads to non-uniform spatial interactions that may even enhance the effect of cooperation.
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