1. Effects of emotion on the evolution of cooperation in a spatial prisoner's dilemma game.
- Author
-
Chen, Wei, Wang, Jianwei, Yu, Fengyuan, He, Jialu, Xu, Wenshu, and Wang, Rong
- Subjects
- *
PRISONER'S dilemma game , *EMOTIONS , *VALUE orientations , *COOPERATION - Abstract
• The evolution of cooperation hypothesized that emotion can influence one's own willingness to change strategies is investigated. • Distinct from the traditional evolutionary model, our model hypothesized that individuals are divided into two categories, namely, non-competitive individuals and competitive individuals, and their emotion is considered quantifiable and cumulative. • The existence of non-competitive individuals has a significant positive effect on the survival of cooperators, but the presence of competitive individuals also makes non-competitive individuals much less effective in promoting cooperation. • The emotional cumulative length plays a key role in promoting overall cooperation, but surprisingly, the cooperation rate of competitive individuals peaks at an intermediate value of emotional cumulative length. Emotion emerges along with individuals' interactions, and numerous experimental studies have shown that emotion plays an important role in individual decision making. However, how emotion affects the evolution of cooperation in structured population is largely unknown. Here we introduce emotion into network reciprocity, where emotion is considered quantifiable and cumulative, and then divide individuals into two types, namely non-competitive individuals whose social value orientation is mutually beneficial and competitive individuals whose social value orientation is maximizing outcomes for the self. Here, we explore the effects of the proportion of non-competitive individuals and emotional cumulative length on the evolution of cooperation. Simulation results show that the existence of non-competitive individuals promotes cooperation in the system. Furthermore, we also find that emotional cumulative length plays a key role in promoting overall cooperation, but surprisingly, the cooperation rate of competitive individuals peaks at an intermediate value of emotional cumulative length. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF