The Role of Noise in the Spatial Public Goods Game
Marco Alberto Javarone, Federico Battiston

TL;DR
This paper investigates how varying levels of stochastic noise influence the collective behavior in the spatial Public Goods Game, revealing complex dynamics dependent on agent rationality and interaction topology.
Contribution
It introduces a stochastic strategy revision process to analyze noise effects on the Public Goods Game in structured populations, linking microscopic dynamics to macroscopic outcomes.
Findings
Noise significantly alters cooperation levels
Rich behavior emerges depending on noise and synergy factor
Heterogeneous populations show diverse dynamics
Abstract
In this work we aim to analyze the role of noise in the spatial Public Goods Game, one of the most famous games in Evolutionary Game Theory. The dynamics of this game is affected by a number of parameters and processes, namely the topology of interactions among the agents, the synergy factor, and the strategy revision phase. The latter is a process that allows agents to change their strategy. Notably, rational agents tend to imitate richer neighbors, in order to increase the probability to maximize their payoff. By implementing a stochastic revision process, it is possible to control the level of noise in the system, so that even irrational updates may occur. In particular, in this work we study the effect of noise on the macroscopic behavior of a finite structured population playing the Public Goods Game. We consider both the case of a homogeneous population, where the noise in the…
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