Evolutionary Dynamics for Persistent Cooperation in Structured Populations
Yan Li, Xinsheng Liu, Jens Christian Claussen, Wanlin Guo

TL;DR
This paper investigates how structured populations, such as lattices, influence the evolution of persistent cooperation strategies in public goods games, revealing that structure promotes cooperation and suppresses defection.
Contribution
It extends the analysis of persistent cooperation to structured populations, deriving fixation probabilities and illustrating spatial dynamics through simulations.
Findings
Structured populations facilitate cooperation more than well-mixed populations.
Persistent cooperators suppress defector spread under relaxed conditions.
Spatial patterns show stable coexistence of strategies.
Abstract
The emergence and maintenance of cooperative behavior is a fascinating topic in evolutionary biology and social science. The public goods game (PGG) is a paradigm for exploring cooperative behavior. In PGG, the total resulting payoff is divided equally among all participants. This feature still leads to the dominance of defection without substantially magnifying the public good by a multiplying factor. Much effort has been made to explain the evolution of cooperative strategies, including a recent model in which only a portion of the total benefit is shared by all the players through introducing a new strategy named persistent cooperation. A persistent cooperator is a contributor who is willing to pay a second cost to retrieve the remaining portion of the payoff contributed by themselves. In a previous study, this model was analyzed in the framework of well-mixed populations. This paper…
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