The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle

In this paper we consider the Evolutionary Spatial Prisoner's Dilemma (ESPD) in which players are modelled by the vertices of a cycle representing a spatial or organisational structure amongst the players. During each round of the ESPD every pair of adjacent players in the cycle play a classica...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: AP Burger, M van der Merwe, JH van Vuuren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Operations Research Society of South Africa (ORSSA) 2013-06-01
Series:ORiON
Online Access:http://orion.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/126
id doaj-6b24f43688fc441f899e424135055e15
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6b24f43688fc441f899e424135055e152020-11-24T23:47:33ZengOperations Research Society of South Africa (ORSSA)ORiON2224-00042013-06-0129111610.5784/29-1-126324The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycleAP Burger0M van der Merwe1JH van Vuuren2Stellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch UniversityIn this paper we consider the Evolutionary Spatial Prisoner's Dilemma (ESPD) in which players are modelled by the vertices of a cycle representing a spatial or organisational structure amongst the players. During each round of the ESPD every pair of adjacent players in the cycle play a classical prisoner's dilemma against each other, and they update their strategies from one round to the next based on the perceived success achieved by the strategies of neighbouring players during the previous round. In this way players are able to adapt and learn from each other's strategies as the game progresses without being able to rationalise good strategies. We characterise all steady states of the game as well as the structures of those initial states that lead to the emergence of persistent substates of cooperation over time. We finally determine analytically (i.e. without using simulation) the probability that the game's states will evolve from a randomly generated initial state towards a steady state which accommodates some form of persistent cooperation. More specifically, we show that there exists a range of game parameter values for which the likelihood of the emergence of persistent cooperation increases to almost certainty as the length of the cycle increases.http://orion.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/126
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author AP Burger
M van der Merwe
JH van Vuuren
spellingShingle AP Burger
M van der Merwe
JH van Vuuren
The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle
ORiON
author_facet AP Burger
M van der Merwe
JH van Vuuren
author_sort AP Burger
title The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle
title_short The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle
title_full The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle
title_fullStr The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle
title_full_unstemmed The evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle
title_sort evolutionary spatial prisoner's dilemma on a cycle
publisher Operations Research Society of South Africa (ORSSA)
series ORiON
issn 2224-0004
publishDate 2013-06-01
description In this paper we consider the Evolutionary Spatial Prisoner's Dilemma (ESPD) in which players are modelled by the vertices of a cycle representing a spatial or organisational structure amongst the players. During each round of the ESPD every pair of adjacent players in the cycle play a classical prisoner's dilemma against each other, and they update their strategies from one round to the next based on the perceived success achieved by the strategies of neighbouring players during the previous round. In this way players are able to adapt and learn from each other's strategies as the game progresses without being able to rationalise good strategies. We characterise all steady states of the game as well as the structures of those initial states that lead to the emergence of persistent substates of cooperation over time. We finally determine analytically (i.e. without using simulation) the probability that the game's states will evolve from a randomly generated initial state towards a steady state which accommodates some form of persistent cooperation. More specifically, we show that there exists a range of game parameter values for which the likelihood of the emergence of persistent cooperation increases to almost certainty as the length of the cycle increases.
url http://orion.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/126
work_keys_str_mv AT apburger theevolutionaryspatialprisonersdilemmaonacycle
AT mvandermerwe theevolutionaryspatialprisonersdilemmaonacycle
AT jhvanvuuren theevolutionaryspatialprisonersdilemmaonacycle
AT apburger evolutionaryspatialprisonersdilemmaonacycle
AT mvandermerwe evolutionaryspatialprisonersdilemmaonacycle
AT jhvanvuuren evolutionaryspatialprisonersdilemmaonacycle
_version_ 1725489249468284928