Content area

Abstract

Asymptotic stability under the replicator dynamics over a continuum of pure strategies is shown to crucially depend on the choice of topology over the space of mixed population strategies, namely probability measures over the real line. Thus, Strong Uninvadability, proved by Bomze (1990) to be a sufficient condition for asymptotic stability under the topology of variational distance between probability measures, implies convergence to fixation over a pure strategy x^sup ^sup *^^ only when starting from a population strategy which assigns to x^sup ^sup *^^ a probability sufficiently close to one. It does not imply convergence to x^sup ^sup *^^ when starting from a distribution of small deviations from x^sup ^sup *^^, regardless of how small these deviations are. It is, therefore, suggested that when a metric space of pure strategies is involved, another topology, hence another stability condition, may prove more relevant to the process of natural selection. Concentrating on the case of a one dimensional continuous quantitative trait, we resort to the natural Maximum Shift Topology in which an -vicinity of the fixation on a pure strategy x^sup ^sup *^^ consists of all mixed population strategies with support which includes x^sup ^sup *^^ and is in the -neighborhood of x^sup ^sup *^^. Under this topology, a relatively simple necessary and sufficient condition for replicator asymptotic stability, namely Continuous Replicator Stability (CRSS), is demonstrated. This condition is closely related to the static stability condition of Neighbor Invadability (Apaloo 1997), and slightly stronger than the condition of Continuous Stability (Eshel and Motro 1981).[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Evolutionary and dynamic stability in continuous population games
Author
Eshel, Ilan; Sansone, Emilia
Pages
445-59
Publication year
2003
Publication date
May 2003
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0303-6812
e-ISSN
1432-1416
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
733580874
Copyright
Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2003