4.8 Article

Evolution of cooperation on temporal networks

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16088-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSFC [61751301, 61533001]
  2. Cross-Disciplinary Fellowship Award from International Human Frontier Science Program [LT000696/2018-C]
  3. China Scholarship Council [201606010270, 201406010195]
  4. Barabasi Lab at Northeastern University
  5. Foster Lab at University of Oxford
  6. Simons Foundation Math+X Grant
  7. John Templeton Foundation [51977]
  8. NIH [P50HG004233]
  9. National Institutes of Health [R01AI141529, R01HD093761, U19AI095219, U01HL089856, UH3OD023268]
  10. DARPA [AWD 1005127]
  11. Levin Lab

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Population structure is a key determinant in fostering cooperation among naturally self-interested individuals in microbial populations, social insect groups, and human societies. Traditional research has focused on static structures, and yet most real interactions are finite in duration and changing in time, forming a temporal network. This raises the question of whether cooperation can emerge and persist despite an intrinsically fragmented population structure. Here we develop a framework to study the evolution of cooperation on temporal networks. Surprisingly, we find that network temporality actually enhances the evolution of cooperation relative to comparable static networks, despite the fact that bursty interaction patterns generally impede cooperation. We resolve this tension by proposing a measure to quantify the amount of temporality in a network, revealing an intermediate level that maximally boosts cooperation. Our results open a new avenue for investigating the evolution of cooperation and other emergent behaviours in more realistic structured populations. Population structure enables emergence of cooperation among individuals, but the impact of the dynamic nature of real interaction networks is not understood. Here, the authors study the evolution of cooperation on temporal networks and find that temporality enhances the evolution of cooperation.

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