Stochasticity, Selection, and the Evolution of Cooperation in a Two-Level Moran Model of the Snowdrift Game

Author:

McLoone Brian123,Fan Wai-Tong Louis14,Pham Adam5,Smead Rory6,Loewe Laurence12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 330 North Orchard Street, Madison, WI 53715, USA

2. Laboratory of Genetics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 425-G Henry Mall, Madison, WI 53706, USA

3. School of Philosophy, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Staraya Basmannaya st., No. 21/4, Moscow 105066, Russia

4. Department of Mathematics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 408 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA

5. Department of Philosophy, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 600 North Park Street, Madison, WI 53706, USA

6. Department of Philosophy and Religion, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, 371 Holmes Hall, Boston, MA 02115, USA

Abstract

The Snowdrift Game, also known as the Hawk-Dove Game, is a social dilemma in which an individual can participate (cooperate) or not (defect) in producing a public good. It is relevant to a number of collective action problems in biology. In a population of individuals playing this game, traditional evolutionary models, in which the dynamics are continuous and deterministic, predict a stable, interior equilibrium frequency of cooperators. Here, we examine how finite population size and multilevel selection affect the evolution of cooperation in this game using a two-level Moran process, which involves discrete, stochastic dynamics. Our analysis has two main results. First, we find that multilevel selection in this model can yield significantly higher levels of cooperation than one finds in traditional models. Second, we identify a threshold effect for the payoff matrix in the Snowdrift Game, such that below (above) a determinate cost-to-benefit ratio, cooperation will almost surely fix (go extinct) in the population. This second result calls into question the explanatory reach of traditional continuous models and suggests a possible alternative explanation for high levels of cooperative behavior in nature.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Multidisciplinary,General Computer Science

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