Evolution of cooperation through power law distributed conflicts (Q2012861)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Evolution of cooperation through power law distributed conflicts |
scientific article |
Statements
Evolution of cooperation through power law distributed conflicts (English)
0 references
3 August 2017
0 references
Summary: At an individual level, cooperation can be seen as a behavior that uses personal resource to support others or the groups which one belongs to. In a conflict between two individuals, a selfish person gains an advantage over a cooperative opponent, while in a group-group conflict the group with more cooperators wins. In this work, we develop a population model with continual conflicts at various scales and show cooperation can be sustained even when interpersonal conflicts dominate, as long as the conflict size follows a power law. The power law assumption has been met in several observations from real-world conflicts. Specifically if the population is structured on a scale-free network, both the power law distribution of conflicts and the survival of cooperation can be naturally induced without assuming a homogeneous population or frequent relocation of members. On the scale-free network, even when most people become selfish from continual person-person conflicts, people on the hubs tend to remain unselfish and play a role as ``repositories'' of cooperation.
0 references
cooperation
0 references
group-group conflict
0 references
population model
0 references
0 references