2016
DOI: 10.1007/s00285-016-1010-8
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Analysis of the expected density of internal equilibria in random evolutionary multi-player multi-strategy games

Abstract: In this paper, we study the distribution and behaviour of internal equilibria in a d-player n-strategy random evolutionary game where the game payoff matrix is generated from normal distributions. The study of this paper reveals and exploits interesting connections between evolutionary game theory and random polynomial theory. The main contributions of the paper are some qualitative and quantitative results on the expected density, f n,d , and the expected number, E(n, d), of (stable) internal equilibria. Firs… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…For sufficiently large d, when r increases from 0 (uncorrelated) to 1 (identical), E(r , d) reduces from O(d 1/2 ) at r = 0, to O(d 1/4 ) for 0 < r < 1 and to 0 at r = 1. This theorem generalises and improves the main results in [15] for the case r = 0: the asymptotic behaviour,…”
Section: Theorem 1 (On the Expected Number Of Internal Equilibria)supporting
confidence: 85%
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“…For sufficiently large d, when r increases from 0 (uncorrelated) to 1 (identical), E(r , d) reduces from O(d 1/2 ) at r = 0, to O(d 1/4 ) for 0 < r < 1 and to 0 at r = 1. This theorem generalises and improves the main results in [15] for the case r = 0: the asymptotic behaviour,…”
Section: Theorem 1 (On the Expected Number Of Internal Equilibria)supporting
confidence: 85%
“…Similar to the foundational concept of Nash equilibrium in classical game theory [42], the study of equilibrium points and their stability in EGT has been of significant importance and extensive research [4,10,12,14,15,27,28,36]. They represent population compositions where all the strategies have the same average fitness, thus predicting the coexistence of different strategic behaviours or types in a population.…”
Section: Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…3. In the two-player setting (namely, the Prisoner's Dilemma) the behavior of proposing prior commitments has been shown to promote the evolution of cooperation if the cost of arranging commitment is sufficiently small compared to the cost of cooperation [19,23,25]. But when larger groups of actors are involved, decision-making becomes much more complex [11,12,15,26,70]. Instead of a clear, full commitment or, no-commitment, from the co-player as in the two-player game, when moving to the multi-player decision scenario of the PGG, there can be several possible intermediate degrees of participation (as many as the size of the group, i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%