2009
DOI: 10.1103/physreve.80.026121
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Partner selections in public goods games with constant group size

Abstract: Most of previous studies concerning the Public Goods Game assume either participation is unconditional or the number of actual participants in a competitive group changes over time. How the fixed group size, prescribed by social institutions, affects the evolution of cooperation is still unclear. We propose a model where individuals with heterogeneous social ties might well engage in differing numbers of Public Goods Games, yet with each Public Goods Game being constant size during the course of evolution. To … Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…Since these responders have just a few partners to interact with, they are coerced to lower their acceptance threshold. It is worth noting that whenever the role assignment goes independent of the degree (i.e., α = 0), the population is equilibrated at very low offer and acceptance level, indicating the scale-free network itself is unable to induce the evolution of the fair split and egalitarian asking rate, which is different from the remarkably positive effect of the heterogeneity in promoting cooperation3233.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Since these responders have just a few partners to interact with, they are coerced to lower their acceptance threshold. It is worth noting that whenever the role assignment goes independent of the degree (i.e., α = 0), the population is equilibrated at very low offer and acceptance level, indicating the scale-free network itself is unable to induce the evolution of the fair split and egalitarian asking rate, which is different from the remarkably positive effect of the heterogeneity in promoting cooperation3233.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…In particular, since the seminal paper on spatial games [20], there have been a growing number of papers studying evolutionary games in structured populations [46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55]. Apart from the well-mixed assumptions in traditional game theoretical studies, a population structure defines who plays with whom [22].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In previous studies on PGGs, players either are enforced to participate in all the PGGs that centered on his neighbors and himself [23,12,28,15], or play PGGs optionally [27,10,24,11], or are selected as group members unidirectionally by the focal individuals [30]. However, groups are not always constituted in the ways described above.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%