Wednesday, 4 September 2013
On 18:48 by Asveth Sreiram No comments
Sep. 2, 2013 — With new insights into the classical game theory match-up known as the "Prisoner's Dilemma," University of Pennsylvania biologists offer a mathematically based explanation for why cooperation and generosity have evolved in nature.
Their work builds upon the seminal findings of economist John Nash, who advanced the field of game theory in the 1950s, as well as those of computational biologist William Press and physicist-mathematician Freeman Dyson, who last year identified a new class of strategies for succeeding in the Prisoner's Dilemma.
Postdoctoral researcher Alexander J. Stewart and associate professor Joshua B. Plotkin, both of Penn's Department of Biology in the School of Arts and Sciences, examined the outcome of the Prisoner's Dilemma as played repeatedly by a large, evolving population of players. While other researchers have previously suggested that cooperative strategies can be successful in such a scenario, Stewart and Plotkin offer mathematical proof that the only strategies that succeed in the long term are generous ones. They report their findings in theProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of Sept. 2.
"Ever since Darwin," Plotkin said, "biologists have been puzzled about why there is so much apparent cooperation, and even flat-out generosity and altruism, in nature. The literature on game theory has worked to explain why generosity arises. Our paper provides such an explanation for why we see so much generosity in front of us."
The Prisoner's Dilemma is a way of studying how individuals choose whether or not to cooperate. In the game, if both players cooperate, they both receive a payoff. If one cooperates and the other does not, the cooperating player receives the smallest possible payoff, and the defecting player the largest. If both players do not cooperate, they receive a payoff, but it is less than what they would gain if both had cooperated. In other words, it pays to cooperate, but it can pay even more to be selfish.
In the Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma, two players repeatedly face off against one another and can employ different strategies to beat their opponent. In 2012, Press and Dyson "shocked the world of game theory," Plotkin said, by identifying a group of strategies for playing this version of the game. They called this class of approaches "zero determinant" strategies because the score of one player is related linearly to the other. What's more, they focused on a subset of zero determinant approaches they deemed to be extortion strategies. If a player employed an extortion strategy against an unwitting opponent, that player could force the opponent into receiving a lower score or payoff.
Stewart and Plotkin became intrigued with this finding, and last year wrote a commentary in PNAS about the Press and Dyson work. They began to explore a different approach to the Prisoner's Dilemma. Instead of a head-to-head competition, they envisioned a population of players matching up against one another, as might occur in a human or animal society in nature. The most successful players would get to "reproduce" more, passing on their strategies to the next generation of players.
It quickly became clear to the Penn biologists that extortion strategies wouldn't do well if played within a large, evolving population because an extortion strategy doesn't succeed if played against itself.
"The fact that there are extortion strategies immediately suggests that, at the other end of the scale, there might also be generous strategies," Stewart said. "You might think being generous would be a stupid thing to do, and it is if there are only two players in the game, but, if there are many players and they all play generously, they all benefit from each other's generosity."
In generous strategies, which are essentially the opposite of extortion strategies, players tend to cooperate with their opponents, but, if they don't, they suffer more than their opponents do over the long term. "Forgiveness" is also a feature of these strategies. A player who encounters a defector may punish the defector a bit but after a time may cooperate with the defector again.
Stewart noticed the first of these generous approaches among the zero determinant strategies that Press and Dyson had defined. After simulating how some generous strategies would fare in an evolving population, he and Plotkin crafted a mathematical proof showing that, not only can generous strategies succeed in the evolutionary version of the Prisoner's Dilemma, in fact these are the only approaches that resist defectors over the long term.
"Our paper shows that no selfish strategies will succeed in evolution," Plotkin said. "The only strategies that are evolutionarily robust are generous ones."
The discovery, while abstract, helps explain the presence of generosity in nature, an inclination that can sometimes seem counter to the Darwinian notion of survival of the fittest.
"When people act generously they feel it is almost instinctual, and indeed a large literature in evolutionary psychology shows that people derive happiness from being generous," Plotkin said. "It's not just in humans. Of course social insects behave this way, but even bacteria and viruses share gene products and behave in ways that can't be described as anything but generous."
"We find that in evolution, a population that encourages cooperation does well," Stewart said. "To maintain cooperation over the long term, it is best to be generous.
"
"
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
A team of scientists using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has made the most detailed global map yet of the glow from a planet orbiti...
-
Aug. 29, 2013 — The age at which children learn a second language can have a significant bearing on the structure of their adult brain, ...
-
Nov. 2, 2013 — It doesn't take a Watson to realize that even the world's best supercomputers are staggeringly inefficient and ene...
-
Oct. 3, 2013 — Scientists have revealed nearly 100 genetic variants implicated in the development of cancers such as breast cancer and pr...
-
Nov. 1, 2013 — It was once thought that each cell in a person's body possesses the same DNA code and that the particular way the geno...
-
Oct. 30, 2013 — Video gaming causes increases in the brain regions responsible for spatial orientation, memory formation and strategic pl...
-
What you'll need: A plastic comb (or an inflated balloon) A narrow stream of water from a tap Dry hair Instructions: Tu...
-
Aug. 26, 2013 — Where did the Chelyabinsk meteorite come from? As a meteoroid, it either collided with another body in the solar system ...
-
Dec. 13, 2013 — South Pole Telescope scientists have detected for the first time a subtle distortion in the oldest light in the universe,...
-
This image shows two of the galaxy clusters Aug. 1, 2013 — Our universe is filled with gobs of galaxies, bound together by gravity...
Recent Posts
Sample Text
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(421)
-
▼
September
(151)
- Ancient Soils Reveal Clues to Early Life On Earth
- Engineers Build Computer Using Carbon Nanotube Tec...
- 'Jekyll and Hyde' Star Morphs from Radio to X-Ray ...
- Oldest Lizard-Like Fossil Yet to Be Found Hints at...
- Enormous Catalog of More Than 300,000 Nearby Galaxies
- World Record Solar Cell With 44.7% Efficiency
- Math Explains History: Simulation Accurately Captu...
- Scientists Closer to Universal Flu Vaccine After P...
- Chasing the 'Black Holes' of the Ocean
- Optical Properties of a Novel Kind of Magnetism Pr...
- NASA Curiosity Rover Detects No Methane On Mars
- Formation of Unusual Ring of Radiation Around Eart...
- Novel Gene Discovery Could Lead to New HIV Treatments
- Beyond Quantum Simulation: Physicists Create 'Crys...
- Stem Cell Reprogramming Made Easier
- Four New Species of 'Legless Lizards' Discovered L...
- Clues to Growth of Colossus in Coma Cluster of Gal...
- Scientists Reveal How Beta-Amyloid May Cause Alzhe...
- Seismologists Puzzle Over Largest Deep Earthquake ...
- Giant Prehistoric Elephant Slaughtered by Early Hu...
- Earth Expected to Be Habitable for Another 1.75 Bi...
- Toxoplasma Infection Permanently Shifts Balance in...
- Coma: Researchers Observe Never-Before-Detected Br...
- Controlling Wettability: 'Sticky Tape' for Water D...
- Uncovering Cancer's Inner Workings by Capturing Li...
- Hubble Catches a Spiral in the Air Pump
- Death and Disability from Air Pollution Down 35 Pe...
- Dinosaur Wind Tunnel Test Provides New Insight Int...
- Algorithm Finds Missing Phytoplankton in Southern ...
- Wetlands More Cost-Effective in Nutrient Removal, ...
- Environmental Complexity Promotes Biodiversity
- Heavily Logged Forests Still Valuable for Tropical...
- Model of Dangerous Bee Disease in Jersey Provides ...
- Wide-Faced Men Make Others Act Selfishly
- Who Was Eating Salmon 45,000 Years Ago in the Cauc...
- Stronger Winds May Explain Puzzling Growth of Sea ...
- Human Activity Affects Vertical Structure of Atmos...
- Video Games Improve Your Motion Perception, but On...
- Extremely Potent, Improved Derivatives of Successf...
- Invention Jet Prints Nanostructures With Self-Asse...
- Get Ready for Rosetta's Wake-Up Call With Activity...
- Balloon-Borne Astronomy Experiment X-Calibur Racin...
- Fireballs in Jupiter's Atmosphere Observed by Amat...
- New Catalyzer to Avoid Environmental Pollution fro...
- Harnessing the Sun's Energy With Tiny Particles
- New Technology for Bioseparation
- Off-Hour Truck Deliveries in Manhattan Reduce Traf...
- Machine Learning Used to Boil Down the Stories Tha...
- Snake Robot On Mars?
- iPad App Teaches Students Key Skill for Success in...
- When Technology Merges With Healthcare: Mobile Dia...
- Speeding Up Cancer Diagnosis During Surgery
- Smartphone 'Microscope' Can Detect a Single Virus,...
- Energy from Tides and Currents: Best Arrangement o...
- Clean Energy Least Costly to Power America's Elect...
- Researchers Study Ways to Make Stronger Materials ...
- Weak Charge of Proton Determined for First Time
- Biologists Develop New Method for Discovering Anti...
- How Birds Got Their Wings: Fossil Data Show Scalin...
- Scientists Use 'Wired Microbes' to Generate Electr...
- Light Steered in New Directions: 2-D Material Coul...
- How and Where Imagination Occurs in Human Brains
- Feeling Small: Fingers Can Detect Nano-Scale Wrink...
- Magnetic Jet Shows How Stars Begin Their Final Tra...
- Time Is in the Eye of the Beholder: Time Perceptio...
- Quantum Entanglement Only Dependent Upon Area
- Achilles' Heel of Ice Shelves Is Beneath the Water...
- Spider Silk Coated With Carbon Nanotubes Has Multi...
- Catastrophic Collapse of Ice Lake Created Aram Cha...
- Changes in Saturn's Moon Titan’s Surface Brightnes...
- Super Efficient Combustion Engine Emits Half the C...
- To Touch the Microcosmos: New Haptic Microscope Te...
- 'Terminator' Polymer: Self-Healing Polymer That Sp...
- Low Omega-3 Could Explain Why Some Children Strugg...
- Tiny Plankton Could Have Big Impact On Climate: CO...
- Get Touchy Feely With Plants: Gently Rubbing Them ...
- Viruses Associated With Coral Epidemic of 'White P...
- Scientists Discover Cosmic Factory for Making Buil...
- Biochemists Resurrect 'Molecular Fossils': Finding...
- Simple Textiles Can Be Used With Catalysts to Enab...
- The '50-50' Chip: Memory Device of the Future? Mat...
- Scientists Achieve Highest Open-Circuit Voltage fo...
- Software May Be Able to Take Over from Hardware in...
- Dogs' Behavior Could Help Design Social Robots
- Insights Into Evolution of Life On Earth from One ...
- Take a Virtual Tour of Vesta With New High Resolut...
- Cilantro, That Favorite Salsa Ingredient, Purifies...
- Functioning 'Mechanical Gears' Seen in Nature for ...
- Genes Linked to Being Right Or Left-Handed Identified
- NASA's Voyager 1 Spacecraft Embarks On Historic Jo...
- Darwin's Dilemma Resolved: Evolution's 'Big Bang' ...
- Hubble Uncovers Largest Known Population of Star C...
- The Inside of the Milky Way Galaxy in 3-D
- Orangutans Plan Their Future Route and Communicate...
- The Final Nail in the Jurassic Park Coffin? Next G...
- Paleorivers Across Sahara May Have Supported Ancie...
- Quantum Temperature: Scientists Study the Physics ...
- New 'Artificial Nose' Device Can Speed Diagnosis o...
- Extreme Life Forms: Life Found in the Sediments of...
- Possibility of Selectively Erasing Unwanted Memories
-
▼
September
(151)
0 comments:
Post a Comment