Research Group for Evolutionary Theory, Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Plön, Germany.
PLoS One. 2012;7(4):e35287. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0035287. Epub 2012 Apr 26.
Evolutionary game dynamics in finite populations assumes that all mutations are equally likely, i.e., if there are n strategies a single mutation can result in any strategy with probability 1/n. However, in biological systems it seems natural that not all mutations can arise from a given state. Certain mutations may be far away, or even be unreachable given the current composition of an evolving population. These distances between strategies (or genotypes) define a topology of mutations that so far has been neglected in evolutionary game theory. In this paper we re-evaluate classic results in the evolution of cooperation departing from the assumption of uniform mutations. We examine two cases: the evolution of reciprocal strategies in a repeated prisoner's dilemma, and the evolution of altruistic punishment in a public goods game. In both cases, alternative but reasonable mutation kernels shift known results in the direction of less cooperation. We therefore show that assuming uniform mutations has a substantial impact on the fate of an evolving population. Our results call for a reassessment of the "model-less" approach to mutations in evolutionary dynamics.
有限群体中的进化博弈动力学假设所有突变都是同等可能的,即如果有 n 种策略,单个突变可能导致任何策略的概率为 1/n。然而,在生物系统中,并非所有突变都可能从给定状态产生,这似乎是合理的。某些突变可能很遥远,甚至在给定的进化群体组成下是无法达到的。这些策略(或基因型)之间的距离定义了突变的拓扑结构,这在进化博弈论中迄今为止一直被忽视。在本文中,我们从均匀突变的假设出发,重新评估合作进化中的经典结果。我们考察了两种情况:重复囚徒困境中互惠策略的进化,以及公共物品博弈中利他惩罚的进化。在这两种情况下,替代但合理的突变核都会使已知的结果朝着合作减少的方向转变。因此,我们表明,假设均匀突变对进化群体的命运有重大影响。我们的结果呼吁重新评估进化动力学中“无模型”方法的突变。