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Game Equilibrium Models I: Evolution and Game Dynamics /

Game Equilibrium Models I: Evolution and Game Dynamics /
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Field name Details
Dewey Class 519.2
Title Game Equilibrium Models I ([EBook] :) : Evolution and Game Dynamics / / edited by Reinhard Selten.
Added Personal Name Selten, Reinhard editor.
Other name(s) SpringerLink (Online service)
Publication Berlin, Heidelberg : : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : : Imprint: Springer, , 1991.
Physical Details IX, 330 p. : online resource.
ISBN 9783662026748
Summary Note There are two main approaches towards the phenotypic analysis of frequency dependent natural selection. First, there is the approach of evolutionary game theory, which was introduced in 1973 by John Maynard Smith and George R. Price. In this theory, the dynamical process of natural selection is not modeled explicitly. Instead, the selective forces acting within a population are represented by a fitness function, which is then analysed according to the concept of an evolutionarily stable strategy or ESS. Later on, the static approach of evolutionary game theory has been complemented by a dynamic stability analysis of the replicator equations. Introduced by Peter D. Taylor and Leo B. Jonker in 1978, these equations specify a class of dynamical systems, which provide a simple dynamic description of a selection process. Usually, the investigation of the replicator dynamics centers around a stability analysis of their stationary solutions. Although evolutionary stability and dynamic stability both intend to characterize the long-term outcome of frequency dependent selection, these concepts differ considerably in the 'philosophies' on which they are based. It is therefore not too surprising that they often lead to quite different evolutionary predictions (see, e. g. , Weissing 1983). The present paper intends to illustrate the incongruities between the two approaches towards a phenotypic theory of natural selection. A detailed game theoretical and dynamical analysis is given for a generic class of evolutionary normal form games.:
Contents note to the Series “Game Equilibrium Models” -- to Volume I: “Evolution and Game Dynamics” -- Game Theory and Population Dynamics in Complex Genetical Systems: The Role of Sex in Short Term and in Long Term Evolution -- Evolutionary Stability and Dynamic Stability in a Class of Evolutionary Normal Form Games -- Anticipatory Learning in Two-Person Games -- The Origin of Isogamous Sexual Differentiation -- The Evolutionary Stability of Bluffing in a Class of Extensive Form Games -- Pollinator Foraging and Flower Competition in a Game Equilibrium Model -- To Trade, or Not to Trade; That Is the Question -- Competition Avoidance in a Dragonfly Mating System -- On the Evolution of Group-Based Altruism.
System details note Online access to this digital book is restricted to subscription institutions through IP address (only for SISSA internal users)
Internet Site http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-02674-8
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