Cooperation, involuntary defection, and Polymorphic Evolutionary Games

The subject of involuntary defection in the context of cycles of interaction approach to direct reciprocal cooperation was introduced some time ago (J. Theor. Biol., 242: 873–879). Current work is motivated by the subsequent accumulation of empirical evidence and the advances in the methodology of e...

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Published inBioSystems Vol. 206; p. 104428
Main Author Fishman, Michael A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ireland Elsevier B.V 01.08.2021
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ISSN0303-2647
1872-8324
1872-8324
DOI10.1016/j.biosystems.2021.104428

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Summary:The subject of involuntary defection in the context of cycles of interaction approach to direct reciprocal cooperation was introduced some time ago (J. Theor. Biol., 242: 873–879). Current work is motivated by the subsequent accumulation of empirical evidence and the advances in the methodology of evolutionary games. In recent decades it become clear that individuals in many animal species vary consistently in their behavioral responses to specific challenges—animal personality. Moreover, these differences have a hereditary component. Finally, investigations into the effects of neuropeptides on behavior suggest that the variations in animal personalities involve polymorphisms based on non-Mendelian heritability within the neuropeptide signaling systems. The last observation suggests that animal personalities can be productively analyzed via Polymorphic Evolutionary Games, which allow us to add genetic model(s) to standard (phenotypic) evolutionary games. Such an analysis of reciprocal cooperation is the subject of the current paper. The results indicate that there is a marked difference between models that assume Mendelian vs. non-Mendelian inheritance of the pertinent traits. Monomorphic and polymorphic-Mendelian models predict pure-strategy (single phenotype) ESS, whereas the non-Mendelian genetic model predicts a mixed strategy ESS exhibiting all three phenotypes. •The two principal elements of pair-wise reciprocity are participants taking turns soliciting and donating help and involuntary defection.•High cost, infrequent reciprocity is maintained by low-cost, high-frequency reciprocity.•Empathy and the cognitive mechanisms used in defector-recognition are independently evolved preconditions for reciprocal cooperation.•The results show that unconditional altruism is consistent with “ignoring” persistent defection.
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ISSN:0303-2647
1872-8324
1872-8324
DOI:10.1016/j.biosystems.2021.104428