McNamara John M, Barta Zoltan, Houston Alasdair I
Department of Mathematics, University of Bristol, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TW, UK.
Nature. 2004 Apr 15;428(6984):745-8. doi: 10.1038/nature02432.
The Prisoner's Dilemma game is widely used to investigate how cooperation between unrelated individuals can evolve by natural selection. In this game, each player can either 'cooperate' (invest in a common good) or 'defect' (exploit the other's investment). If the opponent cooperates, you get R if you cooperate and T if you defect. If the opponent defects, you get S if you cooperate and P if you defect. Here T > R > 0 and P > S, so that 'defect' is the best response to any action by the opponent. Thus in a single play of the game, each player should defect. In our game, a fixed maximum number of rounds of the Prisoner's Dilemma game is played against the same opponent. A standard argument based on working backwards from the last round shows that defection on all rounds is the only stable outcome. In contrast, we show that if extrinsic factors maintain variation in behaviour, high levels of co-operation are stable. Our results highlight the importance of extrinsic variability in determining the outcome of evolutionary games.
囚徒困境博弈被广泛用于研究不相关个体之间的合作如何通过自然选择而进化。在这个博弈中,每个参与者可以选择“合作”(为公共利益投资)或“背叛”(利用对方的投资)。如果对手合作,你合作则得R,背叛则得T。如果对手背叛,你合作则得S,背叛则得P。这里T > R > 0且P > S,所以“背叛”是对对手任何行动的最佳回应。因此在单次博弈中,每个参与者都应该背叛。在我们的博弈中,与同一个对手进行固定最大轮数的囚徒困境博弈。基于从最后一轮逆向推导的标准论证表明,所有轮次的背叛是唯一稳定的结果。相比之下,我们表明如果外部因素维持行为的变异性,高水平的合作是稳定的。我们的结果凸显了外部变异性在决定进化博弈结果方面的重要性。