COEXISTENCE OF STRATEGIES AND CULTURALLY-SPECIFIC COMMON KNOWLEDGE: AN EVOLUTIONARY
ANALYSIS
Angelo ANTOCI (University of Sassari)
Pier Luigi SACCO (University of Bologna)
Luca ZARRI (University of Pavia and University of East Anglia)
We analyze social dynamics in a continuous population where randomly matched
individuals have to choose between two pure strategies only ('cooperate' (C)
and 'not cooperate' (NC)). Individual payoffs associated to the possible outcomes
of each interaction may differ across groups, depending on the specific social
and cultural context to which each agent belongs. In particular, it is assumed
that three sub-populations are initially present, 'framing' the game according
to the Prisoner's Dilemma (PD), Assurance Game (AG) and Other Regarding (OR)
payoff configurations respectively. In this context, we examine both the adoption
process of strategies C and NC within each sub-population and the diffusion
process of 'types' (PD, AG and OR) within the overall community. On the basis
of an evolutionary game-theoretic approach, the paper focuses on the problem
of coexistence of PD, AG and OR groups as well as of "nice" (C) and "mean" (NC)
strategies. In particular, we show that coexistence between C and NC is possible
in the heterogeneous community under examination, even if it is ruled out in
homogeneous communities where only one of the three types is present.