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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Journal of Evolutionary BiologyVolume 19 Issue 3, Pages 726 - 733 Published Online: 9 Jan 2006 Journal compilation © 2010 European Society for Evolutionary Biology Published on behalf of the European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB)
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 388K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking A new route to the evolution of cooperation Copyright 2005 The Authors Journal Compilation 2005 European Society for Evolutionary Biology KEYWORDS evolution of cooperation • evolutionary game theory • prisoner's dilemma • scale-free graphs • structured populations ABSTRACTThe Prisoner's Dilemma (PD) constitutes a widely used metaphor to investigate problems related to the evolution of cooperation. Whenever evolution takes place in well-mixed populations engaged in single rounds of the PD, cooperators cannot resist invasion by defectors, a feature, which is somewhat alleviated whenever populations are spatially distributed. In both cases the populations are characterized by a homogeneous pattern of connectivity, in which every individual is equivalent, sharing the same number of neighbours. Recently, compelling evidence has been accumulated on the strong heterogeneous nature of the network of contacts between individuals in populations. Here we describe the networks of contacts in terms of graphs and show that heterogeneity provides a new mechanism for cooperation to survive. Specifically, we show that cooperators are capable of exploring the heterogeneity of the population structure to become evolutionary competitive. As a result, cooperation becomes the dominating trait in scale-free networks of contacts in which the few highly connected individuals are directly inter-connected, in this way contributing to self-sustain cooperation. Received 06 October 2005; revised 03 November 2005; accepted 04 November 2005 |