The key role of cheaters in the persistence of cooperation
Sanasar G. Babajanyan, Yuri I. Wolf, Eugene V. Koonin, Nash D. Rochman

TL;DR
This paper shows that cheaters can unexpectedly help maintain cooperation in populations by enabling population growth through multi-level selection.
Contribution
The study reveals that cheaters can act as altruists at the group level, promoting cooperation through multilevel selection dynamics.
Findings
Cheaters can promote cooperation by enabling population growth at the group level.
Cooperator survival positively correlates with cheaters under relative fitness advantage.
Agent-based models confirm cheaters facilitate cooperative trait emergence in bacterial biofilms.
Abstract
Evolution of cooperation is a major, extensively studied problem in evolutionary biology. Co-operation is beneficial for a population as a whole but costly for the bearers of social traits such that cheaters enjoy a selective advantage over cooperators. Here we focus on coevolution of cooperators and cheaters in a multi-level selection framework, by modeling competition among groups composed of cooperators and cheaters. Cheaters enjoy a reproductive advantage over cooperators at the individual level, independent of the presence of cooperators in the group. Cooperators carry a social trait that provides a fitness advantage to the respective groups. In the case of absolute fitness advantage, where the survival probability of a group is independent of the composition of other groups, the survival of cooperators does not correlate with the presence of cheaters. By contrast, in the case of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
