Examining the role of individual movement in promoting coexistence in a spatially explicit prisoner's dilemma
Authored by Tommaso Lorenzi, Mark A J Chaplain, Andrew E F Burgess, Pieta G Schofield, Stephen F Hubbard
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.02.028
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The emergence of cooperation is a major conundrum of evolutionary
biology. To unravel this evolutionary riddle, several models have been
developed within the theoretical framework of spatial game theory,
focussing on the interactions between two general classes of player,
``cooperators{''} and ``defectors{''}. Generally, explicit movement in
the spatial domain is not considered in these models, with strategies
moving via imitation or through colonisation of neighbouring sites. We
present here a spatially explicit stochastic individual-based model in
which pure cooperators and defectors undergo random motion via diffusion
and also chemotaris guided by the gradient of a semiochemical.
Individual movement rules are derived from an underlying system of
reaction-diffusion-taxis partial differential equations which describes
the dynamics of the local number of individuals and the concentration of
the semiochemical. Local interactions are governed by the payoff matrix
of the classical prisoner's dilemma, and accumulated payoffs are
translated into offspring. We investigate the cases of both synchronous
and non-synchronous generations. Focussing on an ecological scenario
where defectors are parasitic on cooperators, we find that random motion
and semiochemical sensing bring about self-generated patterns in which
resident cooperators and parasitic defectors can coexist in proportions
that fluctuate about non-zero values. Remarkably, coexistence emerges as
a genuine consequence of the natural tendency of cooperators to
aggregate into clusters, without the need for them to find physical
shelter or outrun the parasitic defectors. This provides further
evidence that spatial clustering enhances the benefits of mutual
cooperation and plays a crucial role in preserving cooperative
behaviours.
Tags
Cooperation
chemotaxis
diffusion
Chaos
prisoner's dilemma
Spatial Games
mobility
Altruism
Populations
Evolutionary games
Pseudomonas-aeruginosa
Host-parasitoid systems
Random motion
Spatial
patterning
Contingent movement