Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 108103 (2007) [4 pages]Dynamical Organization of Cooperation in Complex TopologiesReceived 12 December 2006; published 7 March 2007 In this Letter, we study how cooperation is organized in complex topologies by analyzing the evolutionary (replicator) dynamics of the prisoner’s dilemma, a two-player game with two available strategies, defection and cooperation, whose payoff matrix favors defection. We show that, asymptotically, the population is partitioned into three subsets: individuals that always cooperate (pure cooperators), always defect (pure defectors), and those that intermittently change their strategy. In fact, the size of the later set is the biggest for a wide range of the “stimulus to defect” parameter. While in homogeneous random graphs pure cooperators are grouped into several clusters, in heterogeneous scale-free (SF) networks they always form a single cluster containing the most connected individuals (hubs). Our results give further insights into why cooperation in SF networks is enhanced. © 2007 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.108103
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.108103
PACS:
87.23.Kg, 02.50.Le, 89.75.Fb
|
