Repeated Games and Population Structure

From Evolution and Games

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Revision as of 21:10, 7 June 2010


Contents

Run the simulations

You can download the software here. Once the program is running just click on the big play button to start the fun. Feel free to re-arrange and re-size the windows, zoom-in and out as the program is running. Click here if you need more information about running this program.

Lifecycle

The following figure represents the lifecycle in the computer program.

  • In step one we start with an even-sized population of finite state automata (initial population is made out of ALLD strategies).
  • In step two individuals are matched in pairs to play the game - your are matched with your rightmost neighbor. The repeated game is played between each pair of matched players (one PD game is played for sure and from then on the game is repeated with probability δ).
  • In step three reproduction takes place, a payoff proportional distribution is constructed. To fill up the population in the next generation we proceed in the following manner: the individuals in even positions (we start counting at 0) are determined by sampling from the probability distribution; for odd positions, with probability r a copy of the parent of your left neighbor is created, and with probability 1 − r an individual is sampled from the payoff proportional distribution (this takes care of assortment).
  • Finally, in step four, every individual can mutate with a given probability. From then we go back to matching, and so on.
Lifecycle

Strategies in the computer

Representation

Strategies are programmed explicitly as finite state automata(the program also has options for regular expressions, or Turing machines - see information onRepeated Games for more details about these additional representations).

A finite automaton is a list of states, and for every state it prescribes what the automaton plays when in that state, to which state it goes if the opponent plays cooperate, and to which state it goes if the opponent plays defect.

Example Finite State Automata (Grim Trigger)

The computer representation of the automate above is an array with the following values:

[(C, 0, 1) | (D, 1, 1)]

Each array position represents a state. The first state (indexed 0) codes the action for the empty game history, and the indexes of where to go if the opponent plays cooperation, and defection respectively. There is no limit on the size of this arrays that can grow and shrink dynamically as mutations produce new strategies.

Mutation

Possible mutations are adding states (randomly constructed), deleting states (if the array has more than one state), and reassigning destination states at random. The following video shows an example:


Results

The following picture shows the average payoff obtained by all strategies across runs of 500.000 generations. On the x-axis we vary the continuation probability, and on the y-axis we vary the assortment parameter as described on the paper. Assortment equal to zero is equivalent to random matching, and assortment equal to one means everyone plays the game against like types.

Average payoff as a function of continuation probability and assortment


Average payoff as a function of continuation probability and assortment

The following video shows how the simulation results match the theoretical prediction in the paper, and how it relates to human cooperation.


Average payoff as a function of continuation probability and assortment