Authors
Christoph Hauert, Silvia De Monte, Josef Hofbauer, Karl Sigmund
Publication date
2002/9/21
Journal
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Volume
218
Issue
2
Pages
187-194
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
The public goods game represents a straightforward generalization of the prisoner's dilemma to an arbitrary number of players. Since the dominant strategy is to defect, both classical and evolutionary game theory predict the asocial outcome that no player contributes to the public goods. In contrast to the compulsory public goods game, optional participation provides a natural way to avoid deadlocks in the state of mutual defection. The three resulting strategies—collaboration or defection in the public goods game, as well as not joining at all—are studied by means of a replicator dynamics, which can be completely analysed in spite of the fact that the payoff terms are nonlinear. If cooperation is valuable enough, the dynamics exhibits a rock-scissors-paper type of cycling between the three strategies, leading to sizeable average levels of cooperation in the population. Thus, voluntary participation makes cooperation …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Hauert, S De Monte, J Hofbauer, K Sigmund - Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2002