We demonstrate a paradox of selection: the average level of skill among the survivors of selection may initially increase but eventually decrease. This result occurs in a simple model in which performance is not frequency dependent, there are no delayed effects, and skill is unrelated to risk-taking. The performance of an agent in any given period equals a skill component plus a noise term. We show that the average skill of survivors eventually decreases when the noise terms in consecutive periods are dependent and drawn from a distribution with a “long” tail—a sub-class of heavy-tailed distributions. This result occurs because only agents with extremely high level of performance survive many periods, and extreme performance is not diagnost...
In evolutionary games, reproductive success is determined by payoffs. Weak selection means that even...
This paper studies the effect of randomness in per-period matching on the long-run outcome of non-eq...
Without competition, organisms would not evolve any meaningful physical or cognitive abilities. Comp...
This paper develops and tests a model of the effectiveness of selection processes in eliminating les...
To understand the effects of selection on firm-level learning, this study synthesizes two contrastin...
People often extrapolate from data samples, inferring properties of the population like the rate of ...
When an agent chooses between prospects, noise in information processing generates an effect akin to...
In a view for a simple model where natural selection at the individual level is confronted to select...
Evolutionary dynamics driven out of equilibrium by growth, expansion, or adaptation often generate a...
<p>The game has three strategies: cooperators contribute to the common pool, defectors exploit coope...
<p>Instead of taking the enforceable pairs () as the evolving traits, we consider the adaptive dynam...
People often extrapolate from data samples, inferring properties of the population like the rate of ...
Despite the potential for rapid evolution, stasis is commonly observed over geological timescales – ...
It is likely that the strength of selection acting upon a mutation varies through time due to change...
Goßmann T, Waxman D, Eyre-Walker A. Fluctuating Selection Models and Mcdonald-Kreitman Type Analyses...
In evolutionary games, reproductive success is determined by payoffs. Weak selection means that even...
This paper studies the effect of randomness in per-period matching on the long-run outcome of non-eq...
Without competition, organisms would not evolve any meaningful physical or cognitive abilities. Comp...
This paper develops and tests a model of the effectiveness of selection processes in eliminating les...
To understand the effects of selection on firm-level learning, this study synthesizes two contrastin...
People often extrapolate from data samples, inferring properties of the population like the rate of ...
When an agent chooses between prospects, noise in information processing generates an effect akin to...
In a view for a simple model where natural selection at the individual level is confronted to select...
Evolutionary dynamics driven out of equilibrium by growth, expansion, or adaptation often generate a...
<p>The game has three strategies: cooperators contribute to the common pool, defectors exploit coope...
<p>Instead of taking the enforceable pairs () as the evolving traits, we consider the adaptive dynam...
People often extrapolate from data samples, inferring properties of the population like the rate of ...
Despite the potential for rapid evolution, stasis is commonly observed over geological timescales – ...
It is likely that the strength of selection acting upon a mutation varies through time due to change...
Goßmann T, Waxman D, Eyre-Walker A. Fluctuating Selection Models and Mcdonald-Kreitman Type Analyses...
In evolutionary games, reproductive success is determined by payoffs. Weak selection means that even...
This paper studies the effect of randomness in per-period matching on the long-run outcome of non-eq...
Without competition, organisms would not evolve any meaningful physical or cognitive abilities. Comp...