| Literature DB >> 29154776 |
Genki Ichinose1, Naoki Masuda2.
Abstract
Direct reciprocity is a mechanism for sustaining mutual cooperation in repeated social dilemma games, where a player would keep cooperation to avoid being retaliated by a co-player in the future. So-called zero-determinant (ZD) strategies enable a player to unilaterally set a linear relationship between the player's own payoff and the co-player's payoff regardless of the strategy of the co-player. In the present study, we analytically study zero-determinant strategies in finitely repeated (two-person) prisoner's dilemma games with a general payoff matrix. Our results are as follows. First, we present the forms of solutions that extend the known results for infinitely repeated games (with a discount factor w of unity) to the case of finitely repeated games (0 < w < 1). Second, for the three most prominent ZD strategies, the equalizers, extortioners, and generous strategies, we derive the threshold value of w above which the ZD strategies exist. Third, we show that the only strategies that enforce a linear relationship between the two players' payoffs are either the ZD strategies or unconditional strategies, where the latter independently cooperates with a fixed probability in each round of the game, proving a conjecture previously made for infinitely repeated games.Entities:
Keywords: Cooperation; Direct reciprocity; Discount factor; Prisoner’s dilemma game
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29154776 DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.11.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Theor Biol ISSN: 0022-5193 Impact factor: 2.691