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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1998

Pages: 225-243

Series: Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048149926

Full citation:

Immanuel M. Bomze, "Uniform barriers and evolutionarily stable sets", in: Game theory, experience, rationality, Berlin, Springer, 1998

Abstract

A key concept in evolutionary game theory is that of evolutionary stability [21, 20]. Originally defined for pairwise contests, i.e. symmetric two-person games, a mixed strategy x is said to be evolutionarily stable if it is a best reply to itself, and, moreover, is a better reply to any alternative best reply y than this is to itself. It has been shown that evolutionary stability has important implications for population dynamics based on evolutionary selection. In particular, an evolutionarily stable strategy, viewed as a population state in a finite game in which individuals are "programmed" to pure strategies, is asymptotically stable in the corresponding replicator dynamics [26].

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1998

Pages: 225-243

Series: Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048149926

Full citation:

Immanuel M. Bomze, "Uniform barriers and evolutionarily stable sets", in: Game theory, experience, rationality, Berlin, Springer, 1998