2020
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2019.0789
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A novel route to cyclic dominance in voluntary social dilemmas

Abstract: Cooperation is the backbone of modern human societies, making it a priority to understand how successful cooperation-sustaining mechanisms operate. Cyclic dominance, a non-transitive set-up comprising at least three strategies wherein the first strategy overrules the second, which overrules the third, which, in turn, overrules the first strategy, is known to maintain biodiversity, drive competition between bacterial strains, and preserve cooperation in social dilemmas. Here, we present a novel route to… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(105 reference statements)
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“…Parallels between our exiters and well-known loners, which rose to prominence as a mechanism behind cyclic dominance [3,42,43], undoubtedly invite comparisons between the two. Loners are similar to exiters in that they opt out of the game to avoid getting exploited by defectors; in doing so, loners differ from exiters in that they generate a small-butpositive pay-off for the co-player in the game, regardless of whether this co-player is a cooperator, defector, or another loner.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Parallels between our exiters and well-known loners, which rose to prominence as a mechanism behind cyclic dominance [3,42,43], undoubtedly invite comparisons between the two. Loners are similar to exiters in that they opt out of the game to avoid getting exploited by defectors; in doing so, loners differ from exiters in that they generate a small-butpositive pay-off for the co-player in the game, regardless of whether this co-player is a cooperator, defector, or another loner.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…In our case, cooperators dominate exiters, who dominate defectors, who dominate cooperators. Cyclic dominance has proven influential in ecological [40] and evolutionary game-theoretic [41] contexts, especially in voluntary dilemmas and extensions thereof [3,42,43].…”
Section: Regular Latticementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the simplest and highly simplified case a species A dominates species B, but he latter outperforms species C. More interestingly, species C invades species A, which establishes a fine balance among all participants. This relation is in the heart of the celebrated rock-scissors-paper (RSP ) game, which was identified in many biological and social systems, ranging from interaction between bacterias [9, 10, 11], plants [12], animals [13,14,15], and even humans [16,17,18,20,21,19].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has already been studied (both theoretically and experimentally) that parameters such as system size, mobility, interaction region, protection spillover, risk-averse hedgers affect the stability and evolution of the system in a significant manner [4,8,[24][25][26][27][28]. In particular, demographic fluctuation breaks the coexistence leading to the extinction of certain species [29][30][31][32].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%