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Seminar: Modelling evolution in structured populations involving multiplayer games

Seminar:  Modelling evolution in structured populations involving multiplayer games

Fondation HEC Seminar joint with the Chair in game theory and management and GERAD

Title: Modelling evolution in structured populations involving multiplayer games

Speaker
: Mark Broom – City, University of London, UK

Since 2005 models of evolution have incorporated structured populations, including spatial structure, through the modelling of evolutionary processes on graphs (evolutionary graph theory). One limitation of this otherwise quite general framework is that interactions are restricted to pairwise ones, through the edges connecting pairs of individuals. Yet many animal interactions can involve many individuals, and theoretical models also describe such multi-player interactions. We shall discuss a more general modelling framework of interactions of structured populations where multi-player contests involving groups of variable size are included. We can embed the results of different evolutionary games within our structure, as occurs for pairwise games such as the Prisoner's Dilemma or the Hawk-Dove game on graphs. For a population to evolve we also need an evolutionary dynamics, and we consider a range of such dynamics for our framework. We shall discuss some examples together with some important differences between this approach and evolutionary graph theory.

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Free entrance.
Welcome to everyone!

Date

Thursday February 14, 2019
Starts at 9:30

Price

gratuit

Contact

Place

Université de Montréal - Pavillon André-Aisenstadt
2920, chemin de la Tour
Montréal
QC
Canada
H3T 1N8
514 343-6111
4488

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