Z1-2032 — Annual report 2010
1.
Heterogeneous aspirations promote cooperation in the prisoner's dilemma game

To be the fittest is central to proliferation in evolutionary games. Individuals thus adopt the strategies of better performing players in the hope of successful reproduction. In structured populations the array of those that are eligible to act as strategy sources is bounded to the immediate neighbors of each individual. But which one of these strategy sources should potentially be copied? Our study indicates that heterogeneity in aspirations may be key for the sustainability of cooperation in structured populations.

COBISS.SI-ID: 14724886
2.
Punish, but not too hard: how costly punishment spreads in the spatial public goods game

We study the evolution of cooperation in spatial public goods games where, besides the classical strategies of cooperation (C) and defection (D), we consider punishing cooperators (PC) or punishing defectors (PD) as an additional strategy. Our goal is to separately clarify and identify the consequences of the two punishing strategies. Since punishment is costly, punishing strategies lose the evolutionary competition in case of well-mixed interactions. When spatial interactions are taken into account, however, the outcome can be strikingly different, and cooperation may spread.

COBISS.SI-ID: 14377750