English

The Joker effect: cooperation driven by destructive agents

Physics and Society 2012-10-29 v1 Biological Physics Quantitative Methods

Abstract

Understanding the emergence of cooperation is a central issue in evolutionary game theory. The hardest setup for the attainment of cooperation in a population of individuals is the Public Goods game in which cooperative agents generate a common good at their own expenses, while defectors "free-ride" this good. Eventually this causes the exhaustion of the good, a situation which is bad for everybody. Previous results have shown that introducing reputation, allowing for volunteer participation, punishing defectors, rewarding cooperators or structuring agents, can enhance cooperation. Here we present a model which shows how the introduction of rare, malicious agents -that we term jokers- performing just destructive actions on the other agents induce bursts of cooperation. The appearance of jokers promotes a rock-paper-scissors dynamics, where jokers outbeat defectors and cooperators outperform jokers, which are subsequently invaded by defectors. Thus, paradoxically, the existence of destructive agents acting indiscriminately promotes cooperation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1103.3257,
  title  = {The Joker effect: cooperation driven by destructive agents},
  author = {Alex Arenas and Juan Camacho and José A. Cuesta and Rubén Requejo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1103.3257},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication in the Journal of Theoretical Biology (JTB)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T17:40:31.140Z