Drift reversal in asymmetric coevolutionary conflicts: Influence of microscopic processes and population size
Jens Christian Claussen

TL;DR
This paper investigates how microscopic processes and population size influence drift reversal in asymmetric coevolutionary conflicts, revealing the critical role of nonlinear comparison functions in finite populations.
Contribution
It provides explicit analytical calculations of average drift in finite populations for different microscopic processes, highlighting the importance of nonlinear comparison functions in drift reversal.
Findings
Drift reversal depends on the microscopic process of evolutionary update.
Linear comparison with average payoff does not produce drift reversal.
Nonlinear comparison functions are essential for drift reversal in finite populations.
Abstract
The coevolutionary dynamics in finite populations currently is investigated in a wide range of disciplines, as chemical catalysis, biological evolution, social and economic systems. The dynamics of those systems can be formulated within the unifying framework of evolutionary game theory. However it is not a priori clear which mathematical description is appropriate when populations are not infinitely large. Whereas the replicator equation approach describes the infinite population size limit by deterministic differential equations, in finite populations the dynamics is inherently stochastic which can lead to new effects. Recently, an explicit mean-field description in the form of a Fokker-Planck equation was derived for frequency-dependent selection in finite populations based on microscopic processes. In asymmetric conflicts between two populations with a cyclic dominance, a…
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