By ai (t). The wealthgain of player i wePLOS 1 plosone.
By ai (t). The wealthgain of player i wePLOS 1 plosone.orgBehavioral and Network Origins of Wealth InequalityTable . Measures of wealthinequality in Pardus in comparison with realworld countries.nation Pardus Pardus Pardus China France Germany UK USAyear 200 200 200 2002 994 998 2000unit all players alliance players Nonalliance players individual adult purchase STING agonist-1 household adult familyGini index g 0.653 0.495 0.70 0.550 0.730 0.667 0.697 0.bottom 50 8.2 6.7 three. four.four 3.9 five.0 two.top 0 49.9 35.4 62.3 four.4 six.0 44.four 56.0 69.leading two.4 4.six 20.2 2.3 23.0 32.Gini index g, and fraction of total wealth in held by a fraction of your population. Realworld data is taken from [6]. doi:0.37journal.pone.003503.tand two:55. Soon after an initial steep rise in the initial 50 days, the Gini index g fluctuates among a maximum of 0:68 and a minimum of 0:63, as noticed in Fig. 2 C. A prominent function is usually a sharp drop of g from 0:67 to 0:65 on day 562 which corresponds to 2008224. At this day, a “global” charity event took spot, where thousands of players donated cash for the less wealthy. The inset indicates an exponential recovery, g(t 56){g(t{56)!exp({(t{56)tg ) with decay time tg 36:2 days, (black line). This indicates a remarkable stability of the shape of the wealth distribution, as also seen in Fig. 2 D: First, after dividing wealth by the average wealth on the corresponding day, the distributions on two days which are more than .5 years apart are very similar, see black curve (day 56) PubMed ID:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24754926 and blue curve (day 200, identical to Fig. A). Second, after a significant perturbation on day 562 (red curve, after voluntary redistribution of wealth from the rich to the poor as “Christmas charity”), the distribution quickly returns to its previous form (green curve: one month after the redistribution). Comparing the wealth distribution on various days by the KolmogorovSmirnov statistic and the JensenShannon divergence, we find a relaxation time of about 6 days, see Fig. S2 in the SI. For the timeseries of g and a we find clear anticorrelation, with a Pearson correlation of r {0:49 (p value v0{6 , ignoring the transient phase in the first 200 days and 2tg after the redistribution). The tail of the distribution is neither affected by the charity redistribution event nor by wars. An inverse relation for the Gini coefficient and the powerlaw exponent has also been observed for income in the USA [2], and is expected to a certain extent. The data from Tab. [2] yield r {0:82 with a p value 0:00. Decreasing a means a more pronounced tail in the wealth distribution, i.e. more extremely rich individuals, resulting in higher inequality, and therefore a higher g.increase means that players do on average not get better at gaining wealth, i.e. they do not learn over time how to increase their wealth faster. It is also not consistent with wealth increments proportional to wealth as assumed by the Gibrat model, which would instead lead to an exponential wealthincrease on average. The slopes (i.e. wealthincrease rates) for the different cohorts are different. We find these slopes to be 4 3.6, 3.3, 3.2, 2.8, and 2.7 04 for cohort to cohort 6, respectively. We used a linear fit omitting the first 60 days of each timeseries. This means that the older the cohorts, the faster is their average wealthgain. There are two possible interpretations of this result. Either only the players that are more efficient in accumulating wealth have stayed in the game to become the old cohorts, or older players occupy th.