| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4630504 | Applied Mathematics and Computation | 2012 | 7 Pages | 
Abstract
												In this paper we study the influence of interventions on self-interactions in a spatial Prisoner's Dilemma on a two-dimensional grid with periodic boundary conditions and synchronous updating of the dynamics. We investigate two different types of self-interaction modifications. The first type (FSIP) is deterministic, effecting each self-interaction of a player by a constant factor, whereas the second type (PSIP) performs a probabilistic interventions. Both types of interventions lead to a reduction of the payoff of the players and, hence, represent inhibiting effects. We find that a constant but moderate reduction of self-interactions has a very beneficial effect on the evolution of cooperators in the population, whereas probabilistic interventions on self-interactions are in general counter productive for the coexistence of the two different strategies.
											Related Topics
												
													Physical Sciences and Engineering
													Mathematics
													Applied Mathematics
												
											Authors
												Frank Emmert-Streib, 
											