Identifying Bridges and Catalysts for Persistent Cooperation Using Network-Based Approach
Xingru Chen, Feng Fu

TL;DR
This paper uses a network-based approach to identify key strategies and pathways that promote persistent cooperation in the iterated Prisoner's Dilemma, revealing how certain strategies act as catalysts and bridges to sustain cooperation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel network analysis framework to identify pivotal IPD strategies and pathways that facilitate long-term cooperation and resilience.
Findings
Identifies strategies acting as catalysts for cooperation.
Characterizes evolutionary pathways that bridge defection and cooperation.
Highlights the importance of certain strategies with high betweenness centrality.
Abstract
The framework of iterated Prisoner's Dilemma (IPD) is commonly used to study direct reciprocity and cooperation, with a focus on the assessment of the generosity and reciprocal fairness of an IPD strategy in one-on-one settings. In order to understand the persistence and resilience of reciprocal cooperation, here we study long-term population dynamics of IPD strategies using the Moran process where stochastic dynamics of strategy competition can lead to the rise and fall of cooperation. Although prior work has included a handful of typical IPD strategies in the consideration, it remains largely unclear which type of IPD strategies is pivotal in steering the population away from defection and providing an escape hatch for establishing cooperation. We use a network-based approach to analyze and characterize networks of evolutionary pathways that bridge transient episodes of evolution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Plant and animal studies
