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The Axelrod library is an open source Python package that allows for reproducible game theoretic research into the Iterated Prisoners Dilemma. This area of research began in the 1980s but suffers from a lack of documentation and test code. The goal of the library is to provide such a resource, with facilities for the design of new strategies and interactions between them, as well as conducting tournaments and ecological simulations for populations of strategies. With a growing collection of 139 strategies, the library is a also a platform for an original tournament that, in itself, is of interest to the game theoretic community. This paper describes the Iterated Prisoners Dilemma, the Axelrod library and its development, and insights gained from some novel research.
We present insights and empirical results from an extensive numerical study of the evolutionary dynamics of the iterated prisoners dilemma. Fixation probabilities for Moran processes are obtained for all pairs of 164 different strategies including cl
We present tournament results and several powerful strategies for the Iterated Prisoners Dilemma created using reinforcement learning techniques (evolutionary and particle swarm algorithms). These strategies are trained to perform well against a corp
Since the introduction of zero-determinant strategies, extortionate strategies have received considerable interest. While an interesting class of strategies, the definitions of extortionate strategies are algebraically rigid, apply only to memory-one
The Prisoners Dilemma game has a long history stretching across the social, biological, and physical sciences. In 2012, Press and Dyson developed a method for analyzing the mapping of the 8-dimensional strategy profile onto the 2-dimensional payoff s
Partner selection is an important process in many social interactions, permitting individuals to decrease the risks associated with cooperation. In large populations, defectors may escape punishment by roving from partner to partner, but defectors in