Evolutionarily stable strategy in asymmetric games: Dynamical and information-theoretical perspectives
Vikash Kumar Dubey, Suman Chakraborty, Arunava Patra, Sagar Chakraborty

TL;DR
This paper reviews and clarifies the concept of evolutionarily stable strategies in asymmetric games, establishing new equivalences and linking game theory, dynamics, and information theory to deepen understanding.
Contribution
It provides a coherent review of ESS definitions in asymmetric games, establishes new equivalences, and introduces information-theoretic insights into the concept.
Findings
New equivalences between ESS definitions in asymmetric games
Connections established between stability and replicator dynamics
Information-theoretic perspective using relative entropy
Abstract
Evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) is the defining concept of evolutionary game theory. It has a fairly unanimously accepted definition for the case of symmetric games which are played in a homogeneous population where all individuals are in same role. However, in asymmetric games, which are played in a population with multiple subpopulations (each of which has individuals in one particular role), situation is not as clear. Various generalizations of ESS defined for such cases differ in how they correspond to fixed points of replicator equation which models evolutionary dynamics of frequencies of strategies in the population. Moreover, some of the definitions may even be equivalent, and hence, redundant in the scheme of things. Along with reporting some new results, this paper is partly indented as a contextual mini-review of some of the most important definitions of ESS in asymmetric…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Game Theory and Applications
