Conditional cooperation with longer memory
Abstract
Direct reciprocity is a wide-spread mechanism for evolution of cooperation. In repeated interactions, players can condition their behavior on previous outcomes. A well known approach is given by reactive strategies, which respond to the co-player's previous move. Here we extend reactive strategies to longer memories. A reactive- strategy takes into account the sequence of the last moves of the co-player. A reactive- counting strategy records how often the co-player has cooperated during the last rounds. We derive an algorithm to identify all partner strategies among reactive- strategies. We give explicit conditions for all partner strategies among reactive-2, reactive-3 strategies, and reactive- counting strategies. Partner strategies are those that ensure mutual cooperation without exploitation. We perform evolutionary simulations and find that longer memory increases the average cooperation rate for reactive- strategies but not for reactive counting strategies. Paying attention to the sequence of moves is necessary for reaping the advantages of longer memory.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2402.02437,
title = {Conditional cooperation with longer memory},
author = {Nikoleta E. Glynatsi and Martin A. Nowak and Christian Hilbe},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.02437},
year = {2024}
}