Cooperation in public goods game on regular lattices with agents changing interaction groups
By: Jarosław Adam Miszczak
Potential Business Impact:
Makes groups cooperate even without rules.
The emergence of cooperation in the groups of interacting agents is one of the most fascinating phenomena observed in many complex systems studied in social science and ecology, even in the situations where one would expect the agent to use a free-rider policy. This is especially surprising in the situation where no external mechanisms based on reputation or punishment are present. One of the possible explanations of this effect is the inhomogeneity of the various aspects of interactions, which can be used to clarify the seemingly paradoxical behavior. In this report we demonstrate that the diversity of interaction networks helps to some degree to explain the emergence of cooperation. We extend the model of spatial interaction diversity introduced in [L. Shang et al., Physica A, 593:126999 (2022)] by enabling the evaluation of the interaction groups. We show that the process of the reevaluation of the interaction group facilitates the emergence of cooperation. Furthermore, we also observe that a significant participation of agents switching their interaction neighborhoods has a negative impact on the formation of cooperation. The introduced scenario can help to understand the formation of cooperation in the systems where no additional mechanisms for controlling agents are included.
Similar Papers
Group Formation through Game Theory and Agent-Based Modeling: Spatial Cohesion, Heterogeneity, and Resource Pooling
CS and Game Theory
Helps different groups work together better.
Full Cooperation in Repeated Multi-Player Games on Hypergraphs
CS and Game Theory
Helps groups work together better by sharing fairly.
The Role of Social Learning and Collective Norm Formation in Fostering Cooperation in LLM Multi-Agent Systems
Multiagent Systems
Teaches AI to share and follow rules.