Abstract

As an important part of the evolution of cooperation, interaction diversity has attracted extensive attention. Traditional studies mainly focus exclusively on either time or space, and the comprehensive impact of these two dimensions on the evolution of cooperation deserves further exploration. In this paper, the interaction willingness is abstracted as the network weight, and an adaptive mechanism for interaction willingness based on the delay effect is proposed by combining the network weight and accumulated payoff. Specifically, individuals adjust their willingness to participate in the game with a delay, considering the change in accumulated payoffs within a certain period, rather than the change in immediate payoffs. The degree of delay is reflected in the length of individuals' memory of historical payoffs. Simulation results deviate from the intuition that more information facilitates cooperation, and in certain modes of interaction willingness adjustment, the correlation between cooperation level and memory–length is non–monotonic. Long–memory is conducive to promoting cooperation under the condition of a relatively large range adjustment of interaction willingness. Conversely, with a narrow adjustment range of interaction willingness, cooperation can be effectively established with short–memory. These results hold substantial implications for both theory and practice, as slight adjustment often corresponds to low loss and high operability. In addition, the underlying mechanism is furthermore explored, revealing that the ‘isolation zones’ composed of individuals with low interaction willingness play an important role in promoting cooperation.

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