Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.

We study the role of migration in the evolution of cooperation. Individuals spatially located on a square lattice play the prisoner's dilemma game. Dissatisfied players, who have been exploited by defectors, tend to terminate interaction with selfish partners by leaving the current habitats, an...

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Main Authors: Te Wu, Feng Fu, Long Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3223185?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f973066fb132428498688ef2c05676862020-11-25T00:27:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01611e2766910.1371/journal.pone.0027669Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.Te WuFeng FuLong WangWe study the role of migration in the evolution of cooperation. Individuals spatially located on a square lattice play the prisoner's dilemma game. Dissatisfied players, who have been exploited by defectors, tend to terminate interaction with selfish partners by leaving the current habitats, and explore unknown physical niches available surrounding them. The time scale ratio of game interaction to natural selection governs how many game rounds occur before individuals experience strategy updating. Under local migration and strong selection, simulation results demonstrate that cooperation can be stabilized for a wide range of model parameters, and the slower the natural selection, the more favorable for the emergence of cooperation. Besides, how the selection intensity affects cooperators' evolutionary fate is also investigated. We find that increasing it weakens cooperators' viability at different speeds for different time scale ratios. However, cooperation is greatly improved provided that individuals are offered with enough chance to agglomerate, while cooperation can always establish under weak selection but vanishes under very strong selection whenever individuals have less odds to migrate. Whenever the migration range restriction is removed, the parameter area responsible for the emergence of cooperation is, albeit somewhat compressed, still remarkable, validating the effectiveness of collectively migrating in promoting cooperation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3223185?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Te Wu
Feng Fu
Long Wang
spellingShingle Te Wu
Feng Fu
Long Wang
Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Te Wu
Feng Fu
Long Wang
author_sort Te Wu
title Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.
title_short Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.
title_full Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.
title_fullStr Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.
title_full_unstemmed Moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.
title_sort moving away from nasty encounters enhances cooperation in ecological prisoner's dilemma game.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description We study the role of migration in the evolution of cooperation. Individuals spatially located on a square lattice play the prisoner's dilemma game. Dissatisfied players, who have been exploited by defectors, tend to terminate interaction with selfish partners by leaving the current habitats, and explore unknown physical niches available surrounding them. The time scale ratio of game interaction to natural selection governs how many game rounds occur before individuals experience strategy updating. Under local migration and strong selection, simulation results demonstrate that cooperation can be stabilized for a wide range of model parameters, and the slower the natural selection, the more favorable for the emergence of cooperation. Besides, how the selection intensity affects cooperators' evolutionary fate is also investigated. We find that increasing it weakens cooperators' viability at different speeds for different time scale ratios. However, cooperation is greatly improved provided that individuals are offered with enough chance to agglomerate, while cooperation can always establish under weak selection but vanishes under very strong selection whenever individuals have less odds to migrate. Whenever the migration range restriction is removed, the parameter area responsible for the emergence of cooperation is, albeit somewhat compressed, still remarkable, validating the effectiveness of collectively migrating in promoting cooperation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3223185?pdf=render
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