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      Prosperity is associated with instability in dynamical networks.

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          Abstract

          Social, biological and economic networks grow and decline with occasional fragmentation and re-formation, often explained in terms of external perturbations. We show that these phenomena can be a direct consequence of simple imitation and internal conflicts between 'cooperators' and 'defectors'. We employ a game-theoretic model of dynamic network formation where successful individuals are more likely to be imitated by newcomers who adopt their strategies and copy their social network. We find that, despite using the same mechanism, cooperators promote well-connected highly prosperous networks and defectors cause the network to fragment and lose its prosperity; defectors are unable to maintain the highly connected networks they invade. Once the network is fragmented it can be reconstructed by a new invasion of cooperators, leading to the cycle of formation and fragmentation seen, for example, in bacterial communities and socio-economic networks. In this endless struggle between cooperators and defectors we observe that cooperation leads to prosperity, but prosperity is associated with instability. Cooperation is prosperous when the network has frequent formation and fragmentation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Theor. Biol.
          Journal of theoretical biology
          Elsevier BV
          1095-8541
          0022-5193
          Apr 21 2012
          : 299
          Affiliations
          [1 ] The Microsoft Research-University of Trento Centre for Computational and Systems Biology, Povo (Trento) 38123, Italy.
          Article
          S0022-5193(11)00461-9 NIHMS328122
          10.1016/j.jtbi.2011.09.005
          3298632
          21983567
          aa251576-fb6e-4ebe-87ff-fb96c9bd8393
          History

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