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The Collective Trust Game: An Online Group Adaptation of the Trust Game Based on the HoneyComb Paradigm
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Mutation enhances cooperation in direct reciprocity.

Josef Tkadlec1, Christian Hilbe2, Martin A Nowak1,3

  • 1Department of Mathematics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
|May 8, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Intermediate mutation rates surprisingly promote cooperation in direct reciprocity. Diversity, not uniformity, enhances cooperative evolution, even with low benefit-to-cost ratios.

Keywords:
direct reciprocitydonation gameevolution of cooperationmutation rate

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary biology
  • Game theory
  • Behavioral ecology

Background:

  • Direct reciprocity explains cooperation through repeated interactions.
  • High cooperation requires a benefit-to-cost ratio threshold dependent on memory length.
  • For one-round memory, this threshold is typically two.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the effect of mutation rates on the evolution of cooperation.
  • To determine if cooperation can evolve with benefit-to-cost ratios below the traditional threshold.
  • To explore the role of diversity in promoting cooperation.

Main Methods:

  • Simulations of evolutionary game theory models.
  • Analysis of direct reciprocity dynamics under varying mutation rates.
  • Examination of cooperation thresholds with limited memory.

Main Results:

  • Intermediate mutation rates facilitate high levels of cooperation.
  • Cooperation emerges even when benefit-to-cost ratios are just above one.
  • Mutation-induced diversity stabilizes cooperators and destabilizes defectors.

Conclusions:

  • Diversity, rather than uniformity, is key to the evolution of cooperation.
  • Mutation can enable cooperation in scenarios with low benefit-to-cost ratios.
  • Findings are relevant for understanding cooperation in real-world contexts with limited gains.