4.4 Article

Effectiveness of conditional punishment for the evolution of public cooperation

Journal

JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 325, Issue -, Pages 34-41

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2013.02.008

Keywords

Public goods; Punishment; Structured populations; Conditional strategies

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Research Fund [K-101490, TAMOP-4.2.2.A-11/1/KONV-2012-0051]
  2. Slovenian Research Agency [J1-4055]

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Collective actions, from city marathons to labor strikes, are often mass-driven and subject to the snowball effect. Motivated by this, we study evolutionary advantages of conditional punishment in the spatial public goods game. Unlike unconditional punishers who always impose the same fines on defectors, conditional punishers do so proportionally with the number of other punishers in the group. Phase diagrams in dependence on the punishment fine and cost reveal that the two types of punishers cannot coexist. Spontaneous coarsening of the two strategies leads to an indirect territorial competition with the defectors, which is won by unconditional punishers only if the sanctioning is inexpensive. Otherwise conditional punishers are the victors of the indirect competition, indicating that under more realistic conditions they are indeed the more effective strategy. Both continuous and discontinuous phase transitions as well as tricritical points characterize the complex evolutionary dynamics, which is due to multipoint interactions that are introduced by conditional punishment. We propose indirect territorial competition as a generally applicable mechanism relying on pattern formation, by means of which spatial structure can be utilized by seemingly subordinate strategies to avoid evolutionary extinction. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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