Learning Dynamics and the Co-Evolution of Competing Sexual Species
Georgios Piliouras, Leonard J. Schulman

TL;DR
This paper models the co-evolution of competing sexual species using game theory and Boolean functions, predicting periodic dynamics that explain genetic diversity without mutations or environmental changes.
Contribution
It introduces a new dynamical model of sexual species co-evolution that predicts stable periodic behavior and explains genetic diversity through natural selection alone.
Findings
System behavior is typically periodic.
Learning dynamics can explain genetic diversity.
Gene-level game play leads to optimal population strategies.
Abstract
We analyze a stylized model of co-evolution between any two purely competing species (e.g., host and parasite), both sexually reproducing. Similarly to a recent model of Livnat \etal~\cite{evolfocs14} the fitness of an individual depends on whether the truth assignments on variables that reproduce through recombination satisfy a particular Boolean function. Whereas in the original model a satisfying assignment always confers a small evolutionary advantage, in our model the two species are in an evolutionary race with the parasite enjoying the advantage if the value of its Boolean function matches its host, and the host wishing to mismatch its parasite. Surprisingly, this model makes a simple and robust behavioral prediction. The typical system behavior is \textit{periodic}. These cycles stay bounded away from the boundary and thus, \textit{learning-dynamics competition between…
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