English

Conformity Hinders the Evolution of Cooperation on Scale-Free Networks

Physics and Society 2010-11-24 v1

Abstract

We study the effects of conformity, the tendency of humans to imitate locally common behaviors, in the evolution of cooperation when individuals occupy the vertices of a graph and engage in the one-shot Prisoner's Dilemma or the Snowdrift game with their neighbors. Two different graphs are studied: rings (one-dimensional lattices with cyclic boundary conditions) and scale-free networks of the Barabasi-Albert type. The proposed evolutionary-graph model is studied both by means of Monte Carlo simulations and an extended pair-approximation technique. We find improved levels of cooperation when evolution is carried on rings and individuals imitate according to both the traditional pay-off bias and a conformist bias. More important, we show that scale-free networks are no longer powerful amplifiers of cooperation when fair amounts of conformity are introduced in the imitation rules of the players. Such weakening of the cooperation-promoting abilities of scale-free networks is the result of a less biased flow of information in scale-free topologies, making hubs more susceptible of being influenced by less-connected neighbors.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0906.2046,
  title  = {Conformity Hinders the Evolution of Cooperation on Scale-Free Networks},
  author = {Jorge Pena and Henri Volken and Enea Pestelacci and Marco Tomassini},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0906.2046},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

14 pages, 11 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T13:12:12.696Z