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Feng Fu

Researcher at Dartmouth College

Publications -  137
Citations -  5805

Feng Fu is an academic researcher from Dartmouth College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Prisoner's dilemma. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 115 publications receiving 4868 citations. Previous affiliations of Feng Fu include ETH Zurich & Harvard University.

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Reputation-based partner choice promotes cooperation in social networks.

TL;DR: The results highlight the importance of the consideration of reputation (indirect reciprocity) on the promotion of cooperation when individuals can adjust their partnerships when individuals are able to alter their behavioral strategies and their social interaction partnerships on the basis of reputation.
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Imitation dynamics of vaccination behaviour on social networks

TL;DR: This work sheds light on how imitation of peers shapes individual vaccination choices in social networks, and integrates an epidemiological process into a simple agent-based model of adaptive learning, which suggests parallels to historical scenarios in which vaccination coverage provided herd immunity for some time, but then rapidly dropped.
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Strategy Selection in Structured Populations

TL;DR: The single parameter, sigma, allows us to quantify the ability of a population structure to promote the evolution of cooperation or to choose efficient equilibria in coordination games.
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Predicting the outcomes of treatment to eradicate the latent reservoir for HIV-1.

TL;DR: A stochastic model of HIV dynamics is introduced to calculate the likelihood and timing of viral rebound following antilatency treatment and predicts large variation in rebound times following LRA therapy, which will complicate clinical management.
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Partner switching stabilizes cooperation in coevolutionary prisoner's dilemma

TL;DR: A simple model of coevolutionary prisoner's dilemma in which individuals are allowed to either adjust their strategies or switch their defective partners is proposed and it is found that there is an optimal tendency of switching adverse partnerships that maximizes the fraction of cooperators in the population.