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      Learning in a game context: strategy choice by some keeps learning from evolving in others.

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          Abstract

          Behavioural decisions in a social context commonly have frequency-dependent outcomes and so require analysis using evolutionary game theory. Learning provides a mechanism for tracking changing conditions and it has frequently been predicted to supplant fixed behaviour in shifting environments; yet few studies have examined the evolution of learning specifically in a game-theoretic context. We present a model that examines the evolution of learning in a frequency-dependent context created by a producer-scrounger game, where producers search for their own resources and scroungers usurp the discoveries of producers. We ask whether a learning mutant that can optimize its use of producer and scrounger to local conditions can invade a population of non-learning individuals that play producer and scrounger with fixed probabilities. We find that learning provides an initial advantage but never evolves to fixation. Once a stable equilibrium is attained, the population is always made up of a majority of fixed players and a minority of learning individuals. This result is robust to variation in the initial proportion of fixed individuals, the rate of within- and between-generation environmental change, and population size. Such learning polymorphisms will manifest themselves in a wide range of contexts, providing an important element leading to behavioural syndromes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Proc. Biol. Sci.
          Proceedings. Biological sciences
          1471-2954
          0962-8452
          Dec 7 2010
          : 277
          : 1700
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Département de Sciences Biologiques, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, Succ. Centre-ville, Montréal, Québec, Canada. frederique.dubois@umontreal.ca
          Article
          rspb.2010.0857
          10.1098/rspb.2010.0857
          2982243
          20573623
          ac1f83e6-fd9b-439a-b77b-34710b453fc4
          History

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