2006
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0508201103
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Evolutionary dynamics of social dilemmas in structured heterogeneous populations

Abstract: Real populations have been shown to be heterogeneous, in which some individuals have many more contacts than others. This fact contrasts with the traditional homogeneous setting used in studies of evolutionary game dynamics. We incorporate heterogeneity in the population by studying games on graphs, in which the variability in connectivity ranges from single-scale graphs, for which heterogeneity is small and associated degree distributions exhibit a Gaussian tale, to scale-free graphs, for which heterogeneity … Show more

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Cited by 901 publications
(739 citation statements)
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“…The study of cooperation in an evolutionary context mainly focuses on mechanism that allow the emergence and maintenance of cooperation (see e.g., Axelrod and Hamilton, 1981;Maynard Smith, 1982b;Nowak, 2006b;Santos et al, 2006;Sigmund et al, 2010;Hilbe and Traulsen, 2012;van Veelen et al, 2012). In well-mixed populations, cooperation cannot be maintained when defection emerges unless mechanisms promoting cooperation are present, such as repetition, punishment, or rewarding.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study of cooperation in an evolutionary context mainly focuses on mechanism that allow the emergence and maintenance of cooperation (see e.g., Axelrod and Hamilton, 1981;Maynard Smith, 1982b;Nowak, 2006b;Santos et al, 2006;Sigmund et al, 2010;Hilbe and Traulsen, 2012;van Veelen et al, 2012). In well-mixed populations, cooperation cannot be maintained when defection emerges unless mechanisms promoting cooperation are present, such as repetition, punishment, or rewarding.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These spatial games, where the interactions are localized and non random, have been studied and extended in many ways (see, for example, Refs. [1,2,4,9,10,15,19,22,23,24,25,29,30,31,34,37,38,40,41,44,45,46,47,49,52]). Once the population is spatially structured, a natural question concerns the effects of mobility that, along with other important biological factors, is often neglected [28]: is it possible to evolve and sustain cooperation in a population of mobile agents, where retaliation can be avoided by moving away from the former partner?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In [15] it was shown, that for a variety of dilemmas (including the PD), heterogenous networks (e.g. scale-free networks) favor the emergence of cooperation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%