CLIENTES - ACCESO PRIVADO    Suscribirse a nuestras novedades (RSS)        
 
BÚSQUEDA:        Buscar
Libros nacionales y extranjeros para bibliotecas,
 
 
Búsqueda avanzada
Libros nacionales y extranjeros para bibliotecas, escuelas, universidades, librerías
     
         
  Arte
Astronomía
Botánica
Ciencia y conocimiento
Ciencias aplicadas / tecnología
Ciencias biológicas
Ciencias sociales
Economía
Filosofía
Física
Generalidades
Geografía
Geología
Historia
Infantil / juvenil
Informática
Ingeniería
Lingüística / filología
Literatura
Matemáticas
Material complementario
Medicina
Ocio
Paleontología / fósiles
Química
Religión y teología
Zoología
   
   
 
   
Los Andes Libros s.l. + 34 935 00 39 13
C/ Andalusia, 3 Local 5 - 08014 Barcelona
 
Game-Theoretical Models in Biology
Mark Broom, Jan Rychtar
Game-Theoretical Models in Biology
ean9781439853214
temáticaBIOLOGÍA
año Publicación2013
idiomaINGLÉS
editorialTAYLOR AND FRANCIS
formatoCARTONÉ


48,39 €


   PEDIR
 
NOVEDAD
 
Últimas novedades
biología
Covering the major topics of evolutionary game theory, Game-Theoretical Models in Biology presents both abstract and practical mathematical models of real biological situations. It discusses the static aspects of game theory in a mathematically rigorous way that is appealing to mathematicians. In addition, the authors explore many applications of game theory to biology, making the text useful to biologists as well.

The book describes a wide range of topics in evolutionary games, including matrix games, replicator dynamics, the hawk-dove game, and the prisoner’s dilemma. It covers the evolutionarily stable strategy, a key concept in biological games, and offers in-depth details of the mathematical models. Most chapters illustrate how to use MATLAB® to solve various games.

Important biological phenomena, such as the sex ratio of so many species being close to a half, the evolution of cooperative behavior, and the existence of adornments (for example, the peacock’s tail), have been explained using ideas underpinned by game theoretical modeling. Suitable for readers studying and working at the interface of mathematics and the life sciences, this book shows how evolutionary game theory is used in the modeling of these diverse biological phenomena.
indíce
Introduction

The history of evolutionary games

The key mathematical developments

The range of applications

Reading this book

What Is a Game?

Key game elements

Games in biological settings

Two Approaches to Game Analysis

The dynamical approach

The static approach—evolutionarily stable strategies (ESSs)

Dynamics versus statics

Some Classical Games

The hawk-dove game

The prisoner’s dilemma

The war of attrition

The sex ratio game

The Underlying Biology

Darwin and natural selection

Genetics

Games involving genetics

Fitness, strategies and players

Selfish genes: how can non-beneficial genes propagate?

The role of simple mathematical models

Matrix Games

Properties of ESSs

ESSs in a 2 × 2 matrix game

Haigh’s procedure to locate all ESSs

ESSs in a 3 × 3 matrix game

Patterns of ESSs

Extensions to the hawk-dove game

Nonlinear Games

Overview and general theory

Linearity in the focal player strategy and playing the field

Nonlinearity due to non-constant interaction rates

Nonlinearity in the strategy of the focal player

Some differences between linear and nonlinear theory

Asymmetric Games

Selten’s theorem for games with two roles

Bimatrix games

Uncorrelated asymmetry—the owner-intruder game

Correlated asymmetry

Multi-Player Games

Multi-player matrix games

The multi-player war of attrition

Structures of dependent pairwise games

Extensive Form Games and Other Concepts in Game Theory

Games in extensive form

Perfect, imperfect and incomplete information

Repeated games

State-Based Games

State-based games

A question of size

Life history theory

Games in Finite and Structured Populations

Finite populations and stochastic games

Evolution on graphs

Spatial games and cellular automata

Adaptive Dynamics

Introduction and philosophy

Fitness functions and the fitness landscape

Pairwise invasibility and evolutionarily singular strategies

Adaptive dynamics with multiple traits

The assumptions of adaptive dynamics

The Evolution of Cooperation

Kin selection and inclusive fitness

Greenbeard genes

Direct reciprocity: developments of the prisoner’s dilemma

Punishment

Indirect reciprocity and reputation dynamics

The evolution of cooperation on graphs

Multi-level selection

Group Living

The costs and benefits of group living

Dominance hierarchies: formation and maintenance

The enemy without: responses to predators

The enemy within: infanticide and other anti-social behavior

Mating Games

Introduction and overview

Direct conflict

Indirect conflict and sperm competition

The battle of the sexes

Selecting mates: signaling and the handicap principle

Other signaling scenarios

Food Competition

Introduction

Ideal free distribution for a single species

Ideal free distribution for multiple species

Distributions at and deviations from the ideal free distribution

Compartmental models of kleptoparasitism

Compartmental models of interference

Producer-scrounger models

Predator-Prey and Host-Parasite Interactions

Game-theoretical predator-prey models

The evolution of defense and signaling

Brood parasitism

Parasitic wasps and the asymmetric war of attrition

Complex parasite lifecycles

Epidemic Models

SIS and SIR models

The evolution of virulence

Viruses and the prisoner’s dilemma

Conclusions

Types of evolutionary games used in biology

What makes a good mathematical model?

Future developments

Appendix: Intro to MATLAB

Bibliography

Index

Finançat per UE