Community structure benefits the fixation of cooperation under strong selection
Zhi-Xi Wu, Zhihai Rong, and Han-Xin Yang

TL;DR
This study investigates how community structure and individual activity heterogeneity influence the evolution of cooperation in social networks, revealing that communities promote cooperation under strong selection, while activity heterogeneity has complex effects.
Contribution
It demonstrates that community structure enhances cooperation fixation under strong selection, providing new insights into social dynamics and evolutionary processes.
Findings
Community structure fosters cooperation fixation under strong selection.
Heterogeneous activity benefits cooperation in harsh environments under strong selection.
Community abundance promotes cooperation compared to randomized networks.
Abstract
Recent empirical studies suggest that heavy-tailed distributions of human activities are universal in real social dynamics [Muchnik, \emph{et al.}, Sci. Rep. \textbf{3}, 1783 (2013)]. On the other hand, community structure is ubiquitous in biological and social networks [M.~E.~J. Newman, Nat. Phys. \textbf{8}, 25 (2012)]. Motivated by these facts, we here consider the evolutionary Prisoner's dilemma game taking place on top of a real social network to investigate how the community structure and the heterogeneity in activity of individuals affect the evolution of cooperation. In particular, we account for a variation of the birth-death process (which can also be regarded as a proportional imitation rule from social point of view) for the strategy updating under both weak- and strong-selection (meaning the payoffs harvested from games contribute either slightly or heavily to the…
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