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1.
Phys Rev E ; 104(1-1): 014304, 2021 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34412348

RESUMO

In a world of hardening borders, nations may deprive themselves of enjoying the benefits of cooperative immigrants. Here we analyze the effect of efficient cooperative immigrants on a population playing public goods games. We considered a population structured on a square lattice with individuals playing public goods games with their neighbors. The demographics are determined by stochastic birth, death, and migration. The strategies spread through imitation dynamics. Our model shows that cooperation among natives can emerge due to social contagion of good role-model agents that can provide better quality public goods. Only a small fraction of efficient cooperators, among immigrants, is enough to trigger cooperation across the native population. We see that native cooperation achieves its peak at moderate values of immigration rate. Such efficient immigrant cooperators act as nucleation centers for the growth of cooperative clusters, which eventually dominate defection.

2.
J Theor Biol ; 430: 45-52, 2017 10 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28689891

RESUMO

Predators may attack isolated or grouped prey in a cooperative, collective way. Whether a gregarious behavior is advantageous to each species depends on several conditions and game theory is a useful tool to deal with such a problem. We here extend the Lett et al. (2004) to spatially distributed populations and compare the resulting behavior with their mean-field predictions for the coevolving densities of predator and prey strategies. Besides its richer behavior in the presence of spatial organization, we also show that the coexistence phase in which collective and individual strategies for each group are present is stable because of an effective, cyclic dominance mechanism similar to a well-studied generalization of the Rock-Paper-Scissors game with four species, a further example of how ubiquitous this coexistence mechanism is.


Assuntos
Jogos Experimentais , Comportamento Predatório , Animais , Comportamento Competitivo , Comportamento Cooperativo , Modelos Biológicos , Modelos Teóricos , Dinâmica Populacional
3.
J Theor Biol ; 317: 286-92, 2013 Jan 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23103761

RESUMO

Intransitivity is a property of connected, oriented graphs representing species interactions that may drive their coexistence even in the presence of competition, the standard example being the three species Rock-Paper-Scissors game. We consider here a generalization with four species, the minimum number of species allowing other interactions beyond the single loop (one predator, one prey). We show that, contrary to the mean field prediction, on a square lattice the model presents a transition, as the parameter setting the rate at which one species invades another changes, from a coexistence to a state in which one species gets extinct. Such a dependence on the invasion rates shows that the interaction graph structure alone is not enough to predict the outcome of such models. In addition, different invasion rates permit to tune the level of transitiveness, indicating that for the coexistence of all species to persist, there must be a minimum amount of intransitivity.


Assuntos
Comportamento Cooperativo , Ecossistema , Teoria dos Jogos , Comportamento Competitivo , Simulação por Computador , Densidade Demográfica , Especificidade da Espécie , Fatores de Tempo
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