info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Evolutionary Game Theory in Mixed Strategies: From Microscopic Interactions to Kinetic Equations
Fecha
2021-01Registro en:
Pinasco, Juan Pablo; Rodriguez Cartabia, Mauro; Saintier, Nicolas Bernard Claude; Evolutionary Game Theory in Mixed Strategies: From Microscopic Interactions to Kinetic Equations; American Institute of Mathematical Sciences; Kinetic And Related Models; 14; 1; 1-2021; 115-148
1937-5077
1937-5093
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Pinasco, Juan Pablo
Rodriguez Cartabia, Mauro
Saintier, Nicolas Bernard Claude
Resumen
In this work we propose a kinetic formulation for evolutionary game theory for zero sum games when the agents use mixed strategies. We start with a simple adaptive rule, where after an encounter each agent increases by a small amount h the probability of playing the successful pure strategy used in the match. We derive the Boltzmann equation which describes the macroscopic effects of this microscopical rule, and we obtain a first order, nonlocal, partial differential equation as the limit when h goes to zero. We study the relationship between this equation and the well known replicator equations, showing the equivalence between the concepts of Nash equilibria, stationary solutions of the partial differential equation, and the equilibria of the replicator equations. Finally, we relate the long-time behavior of solutions to the partial differential equation and the stability of the replicator equations.