8,145 research outputs found
Advertising, consensus, and ageing in multilayer Sznajd model
In the Sznajd consensus model on the square lattice, two people who agree in
their opinions convince their neighbours of this opinion. We generalize it to
many layers representing many age levels, and check if still a consensus among
all layers is possible. Advertising sometimes but not always produces a
consensus on the advertised opinion.Comment: 6 pages including 4 figures, for Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Emotional Strategies as Catalysts for Cooperation in Signed Networks
The evolution of unconditional cooperation is one of the fundamental problems
in science. A new solution is proposed to solve this puzzle. We treat this
issue with an evolutionary model in which agents play the Prisoner's Dilemma on
signed networks. The topology is allowed to co-evolve with relational signs as
well as with agent strategies. We introduce a strategy that is conditional on
the emotional content embedded in network signs. We show that this strategy
acts as a catalyst and creates favorable conditions for the spread of
unconditional cooperation. In line with the literature, we found evidence that
the evolution of cooperation most likely occurs in networks with relatively
high chances of rewiring and with low likelihood of strategy adoption. While a
low likelihood of rewiring enhances cooperation, a very high likelihood seems
to limit its diffusion. Furthermore, unlike in non-signed networks, cooperation
becomes more prevalent in denser topologies.Comment: 24 pages, Accepted for publication in Advances in Complex System
Similarity based cooperation and spatial segregation
We analyze a cooperative game, where the cooperative act is not based on the
previous behaviour of the co-player, but on the similarity between the players.
This system has been studied in a mean-field description recently [A. Traulsen
and H. G. Schuster, Phys. Rev. E 68, 046129 (2003)]. Here, the spatial
extension to a two-dimensional lattice is studied, where each player interacts
with eight players in a Moore neighborhood. The system shows a strong
segregation independent on parameters. The introduction of a local conversion
mechanism towards tolerance allows for four-state cycles and the emergence of
spiral waves in the spatial game. In the case of asymmetric costs of
cooperation a rich variety of complex behavior is observed depending on both
cooperation costs. Finally, we study the stabilization of a cooperative fixed
point of a forecast rule in the symmetric game, which corresponds to
cooperation across segregation borders. This fixed point becomes unstable for
high cooperation costs, but can be stabilized by a linear feedback mechanism.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
Adaptive simulation using mode identification
Adaptive simulation using modal clustering and method of potential function
Social diversity and promotion of cooperation in the spatial prisoner's dilemma game
The diversity in wealth and social status is present not only among humans,
but throughout the animal world. We account for this observation by generating
random variables that determ ine the social diversity of players engaging in
the prisoner's dilemma game. Here the term social diversity is used to address
extrinsic factors that determine the mapping of game pay offs to individual
fitness. These factors may increase or decrease the fitness of a player
depending on its location on the spatial grid. We consider different
distributions of extrin sic factors that determine the social diversity of
players, and find that the power-law distribution enables the best promotion of
cooperation. The facilitation of the cooperative str ategy relies mostly on the
inhomogeneous social state of players, resulting in the formation of
cooperative clusters which are ruled by socially high-ranking players that are
able to prevail against the defectors even when there is a large temptation to
defect. To confirm this, we also study the impact of spatially correlated
social diversity and find that coopera tion deteriorates as the spatial
correlation length increases. Our results suggest that the distribution of
wealth and social status might have played a crucial role by the evolution of
cooperation amongst egoistic individuals.Comment: 5 two-column pages, 5 figure
Protocol Requirements for Self-organizing Artifacts: Towards an Ambient Intelligence
We discuss which properties common-use artifacts should have to collaborate
without human intervention. We conceive how devices, such as mobile phones,
PDAs, and home appliances, could be seamlessly integrated to provide an
"ambient intelligence" that responds to the user's desires without requiring
explicit programming or commands. While the hardware and software technology to
build such systems already exists, as yet there is no standard protocol that
can learn new meanings. We propose the first steps in the development of such a
protocol, which would need to be adaptive, extensible, and open to the
community, while promoting self-organization. We argue that devices,
interacting through "game-like" moves, can learn to agree about how to
communicate, with whom to cooperate, and how to delegate and coordinate
specialized tasks. Thus, they may evolve a distributed cognition or collective
intelligence capable of tackling complex tasks.Comment: To be presented at 5th International Conference on Complex System
MHV Vertices And Tree Amplitudes In Gauge Theory
As an alternative to the usual Feynman graphs, tree amplitudes in Yang-Mills
theory can be constructed from tree graphs in which the vertices are tree level
MHV scattering amplitudes, continued off shell in a particular fashion. The
formalism leads to new and relatively simple formulas for many amplitudes, and
can be heuristically derived from twistor space.Comment: 27 p
Freezing and Slow Evolution in a Constrained Opinion Dynamics Model
We study opinion formation in a population that consists of leftists,
centrists, and rightist. In an interaction between neighboring agents, a
centrist and a leftist can become both centrists or leftists (and similarly for
a centrist and a rightist). In contrast, leftists and rightists do not affect
each other. The initial density of centrists rho_0 controls the evolution. With
probability rho_0 the system reaches a centrist consensus, while with
probability 1-rho_0 a frozen population of leftists and rightists results. In
one dimension, we determine this frozen state and the opinion dynamics by
mapping the system onto a spin-1 Ising model with zero-temperature Glauber
kinetics. In the frozen state, the length distribution of single-opinion
domains has an algebraic small-size tail x^{-2(1-psi)} and the average domain
size grows as L^{2*psi}, where L is the system length. The approach to this
frozen state is governed by a t^{-psi} long-time tail with psi-->2*rho_0/pi as
rho_0-->0.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, 2-column revtex4 format, for submission to J.
Phys. A. Revision contains lots of stylistic changes and 1 new result; the
main conclusions are the sam
Distinguishing the opponents in the prisoner dilemma in well-mixed populations
Here we study the effects of adopting different strategies against different
opponent instead of adopting the same strategy against all of them in the
prisoner dilemma structured in well-mixed populations. We consider an
evolutionary process in which strategies that provide reproductive success are
imitated and players replace one of their worst interactions by the new one. We
set individuals in a well-mixed population so that network reciprocity effect
is excluded and we analyze both synchronous and asynchronous updates. As a
consequence of the replacement rule, we show that mutual cooperation is never
destroyed and the initial fraction of mutual cooperation is a lower bound for
the level of cooperation. We show by simulation and mean-field analysis that
for synchronous update cooperation dominates while for asynchronous update only
cooperations associated to the initial mutual cooperations are maintained. As a
side effect of the replacement rule, an "implicit punishment" mechanism comes
up in a way that exploitations are always neutralized providing evolutionary
stability for cooperation
- …
