Jianzhong Wu and Robert Axelrod,
"How to Cope with Noise in the Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma," 1995. With supporting
material.
Robert Axtell, Robert Axelrod,
Joshua Epstein, and Michael D. Cohen, "Aligning Simulation Models: A Case Study
and Results," 1996.
With supporting
material.
Michael D. Cohen, Rick L. Riolo
and Robert Axelrod, "The Emergence of Social Organization in the Prisoners'
Dilemma: How Context-Preservation and other Factors Promote Cooperation." 1999.
Robert Axelrod, "On Six Advances
in Cooperation Theory," 2000.
Michael D. Cohen, Rick L. Riolo
and Robert Axelrod,."The Role of Social Structure in the Maintenance of
Cooperative Regimes," 2001.
Robert Axelrod, "Theoretical
Foundations of Partnerships for Economic Development," 2001.
Rick Riolo, Michael D. Cohen and
Robert Axelrod, "Evolution of Cooperation without Reciprocity," 2001. Commentary by Nowak and
Sigmund on this Nature article, 2001 Response to a Brief
Communication on this Nature article, 2001
Robert Axelrod, Rick L. Riolo and
Michael D. Cohen, "Beyond Geography: Cooperation with Persistent Links in the
Absence of Clustered Neighborhoods," 2002.
Michael D. Cohen,
Rick L. Riolo and Robert Axelrod. The Emergence of Social Organization in the Prisoners' Dilemma: How
Context-Preservation and other Factors Promote Cooperation. Santa Fe Institute Working Paper 99-01-002.
(Postscript text; Gzipped Postscript) (pdf version)
"Twenty Years
on: The Evolution of Cooperation Revisited" by Robert Hoffman, 2000
http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/3/2/forum/1.html
Akiyama, E., and Kaneko, K. (1995) "Evolution of cooperation,
differentiation, complexity, and diversity in an iterated three-person game."
Artificial Life 2: pp. 293-304.
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/akiyama95evolution.html
Mathematica source code from
Gaylord, Richard J. and Louis J. D’Andria, 1998. Simulating Society: A
Mathematica Toolkit for Modeling Socioeconomic Behavior (NY): www.telospub.com
from Brookings’ Center
on Social and Economic Dynamics using Ascape. This includes many models. Some of
these will be described in the Dec. 2001 issue of Atlantic Monthly. See http://www.brook.edu/es/dynamics/models/ascape/
from University of
Chicago group, using RePast. This includes Epstein and Axtell’s sugarscape
model: http://repast.sourceforge.net/
from Marshall Van
Alstyne, School of Information, University of Michigan, an information diffusion
simulator for agent societies. It includes tutorials on several works by March
and by Watts. It just requires Java running under IE. www.si.umich.edu/~mvanalst/iShare