Real social interactions occur on networks in which each individual is connected to some, but not all, of others. In social dilemma games with a fixed population size, heterogeneity in the number of contacts per player is known to promote evolution of cooperation. Under a common assumption of positively biased pay-off structure, well-connected players earn much by playing frequently, and cooperation once adopted by well-connected players is unbeatable and spreads to others. However, maintaining a social contact can be costly, which would prevent local pay-offs from being positively biased. In replicator-type evolutionary dynamics, it is shown that even a relatively small participation cost extinguishes the merit of heterogeneous networks in terms of cooperation. In this situation, more connected players earn less so that they are no longer spreaders of cooperation. Instead, those with fewer contacts win and guide the evolution. The participation cost, or the baseline pay-off, is irrelevant in homogeneous populations, but is essential for evolutionary games on heterogeneous networks.
Participation costs dismiss the advantage of heterogeneous networks in evolution of cooperation
Published 2007 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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- Publication year
2007
- Venue
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
- Publication date
2007-02-02
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics, Economics
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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