Cooperation in the evolutionary snowdrift game with a self-questioning
updating mechanism is studied on annealed and quenched small-world networks
with directed couplings. Around the payoff parameter value r=0.5, we find a
size-invariant symmetrical cooperation effect. While generally suppressing
cooperation for r>0.5 payoffs, rewired networks facilitated cooperative
behavior for r<0.5. Fair amounts of noise were found to break the observed
symmetry and further weaken cooperation at relatively large values of r.
However, in the absence of noise, the self-questioning mechanism recovers
symmetrical behavior and elevates altruism even under large-reward conditions.
Our results suggest that an updating mechanism of this type is necessary to
stabilize cooperation in a spatially structured environment which is otherwise
detrimental to cooperative behavior, especially at high cost-to-benefit ratios.
Additionally, we employ component and local stability analyses to better
understand the nature of the manifested dynamics.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl