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Evolution of extortion in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma games
by
Sigmund, Karl
, Hilbe, Christian
, Nowak, Martin A.
in
Biological Evolution
/ Biological Sciences
/ catalysts
/ Computer Simulation
/ Cooperative Behavior
/ Cubes
/ endosymbionts
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary games
/ Evolutionary theories
/ Extortion
/ Game Theory
/ games
/ Games, Experimental
/ Humans
/ Models, Biological
/ natural selection
/ Payoffs
/ Population size
/ Prisoners dilemma
/ Social Sciences
/ Symbionts
2013
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Evolution of extortion in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma games
by
Sigmund, Karl
, Hilbe, Christian
, Nowak, Martin A.
in
Biological Evolution
/ Biological Sciences
/ catalysts
/ Computer Simulation
/ Cooperative Behavior
/ Cubes
/ endosymbionts
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary games
/ Evolutionary theories
/ Extortion
/ Game Theory
/ games
/ Games, Experimental
/ Humans
/ Models, Biological
/ natural selection
/ Payoffs
/ Population size
/ Prisoners dilemma
/ Social Sciences
/ Symbionts
2013
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Do you wish to request the book?
Evolution of extortion in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma games
by
Sigmund, Karl
, Hilbe, Christian
, Nowak, Martin A.
in
Biological Evolution
/ Biological Sciences
/ catalysts
/ Computer Simulation
/ Cooperative Behavior
/ Cubes
/ endosymbionts
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary games
/ Evolutionary theories
/ Extortion
/ Game Theory
/ games
/ Games, Experimental
/ Humans
/ Models, Biological
/ natural selection
/ Payoffs
/ Population size
/ Prisoners dilemma
/ Social Sciences
/ Symbionts
2013
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Evolution of extortion in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma games
Journal Article
Evolution of extortion in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma games
2013
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Overview
Iterated games are a fundamental component of economic and evolutionary game theory. They describe situations where two players interact repeatedly and have the ability to use conditional strategies that depend on the outcome of previous interactions, thus allowing for reciprocation. Recently, a new class of strategies has been proposed, so-called \"zero-determinant\" strategies. These strategies enforce a fixed linear relationship between one's own payoff and that of the other player. A subset of those strategies allows \"extortioners\" to ensure that any increase in one player's own payoff exceeds that of the other player by a fixed percentage. Here, we analyze the evolutionary performance of this new class of strategies. We show that in reasonably large populations, they can act as catalysts for the evolution of cooperation, similar to tit-for-tat, but that they are not the stable outcome of natural selection. In very small populations, however, extortioners hold their ground. Extortion strategies do particularly well in revolutionary arms races between two distinct populations. Significantly, they benefit the population that evolves at the slower rate, an example of the so-called \"Red King\" effect. This may affect the evolution of interactions between host species and their endosymbionts.
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