Spatially correlated heterogeneous aspirations to enhance network reciprocity

Perc & Wang demonstrated that aspiring to be the fittest under conditions of pairwise strategy updating enhances network reciprocity in structured populations playing 2×2 Prisoner’s Dilemma games (Z. Wang, M. Perc, Aspiring to the fittest and promoted of cooperation in the Prisoner’s Dilemma gam...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physica A 2012-02, Vol.391 (3), p.680-685
Hauptverfasser: Tanimoto, Jun, Nakata, Makoto, Hagishima, Aya, Ikegaya, Naoki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Perc & Wang demonstrated that aspiring to be the fittest under conditions of pairwise strategy updating enhances network reciprocity in structured populations playing 2×2 Prisoner’s Dilemma games (Z. Wang, M. Perc, Aspiring to the fittest and promoted of cooperation in the Prisoner’s Dilemma game, Physical Review E 82 (2010) 021115; M. Perc, Z. Wang, Heterogeneous aspiration promotes cooperation in the Prisoner’s Dilemma game, PLOS one 5 (12) (2010) e15117). Through numerical simulations, this paper shows that network reciprocity is even greater if heterogeneous aspirations are imposed. We also suggest why heterogeneous aspiration fosters network reciprocity. It distributes strategy updating speed among agents in a manner that fortifies the initially allocated cooperators’ clusters against invasion. This finding prompted us to further enhance the usual heterogeneous aspiration cases for heterogeneous network topologies. We find that a negative correlation between degree and aspiration level does extend cooperation among heterogeneously structured agents. ► Network reciprocity in structured populations playing 2×2 Prisoner’s Dilemma games is greater if heterogeneous aspirations are imposed. ► We suggest why heterogeneous aspiration fosters network reciprocity. ► We find that a negative correlation between degree and aspiration level does extend cooperation among heterogeneously structured agents.
ISSN:0378-4371
1873-2119
DOI:10.1016/j.physa.2011.08.039