scholarly journals Win-Stay-Lose-Shift as a self-confirming equilibrium in the iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma

2021 ◽  
Vol 288 (1953) ◽  
pp. 20211021
Author(s):  
Minjae Kim ◽  
Jung-Kyoo Choi ◽  
Seung Ki Baek

Evolutionary game theory assumes that players replicate a highly scored player’s strategy through genetic inheritance. However, when learning occurs culturally, it is often difficult to recognize someone’s strategy just by observing the behaviour. In this work, we consider players with memory-one stochastic strategies in the iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma, with an assumption that they cannot directly access each other’s strategy but only observe the actual moves for a certain number of rounds. Based on the observation, the observer has to infer the resident strategy in a Bayesian way and chooses his or her own strategy accordingly. By examining the best-response relations, we argue that players can escape from full defection into a cooperative equilibrium supported by Win-Stay-Lose-Shift in a self-confirming manner, provided that the cost of cooperation is low and the observational learning supplies sufficiently large uncertainty.

2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (10) ◽  
pp. 3395-3407 ◽  
Author(s):  
RAMÓN ALONSO-SANZ

The effect of keeping memory of previous choices when the players adopt the Paulov and Anti-Paulov strategies in the continuous-valued iterated Prisoner's Dilemma is assessed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 45-56
Author(s):  
Jiawei Li ◽  
Robert Duncan ◽  
Jingpeng Li ◽  
Ruibin Bai

How cooperation emerges and persists in a population of selfish agents is a fundamental question in evolutionary game theory. The research shows that collective strategies with master-slave mechanism (CSMSM) defeat tit-for-tat and other well-known strategies in spatial iterated prisoner's dilemma. A CSMSM identifies kin members by means of a handshaking mechanism. If the opponent is identified as non-kin, a CSMSM will always defect. Once two CSMSMs meet, they play master and slave roles. A mater defects and a slave cooperates in order to maximize the master's payoff. CSMSM outperforms non-collective strategies in spatial IPD even if there is only a small cluster of CSMSMs in the population. The existence and performance of CSMSM in spatial iterated prisoner's dilemma suggests that cooperation first appears and persists in a group of collective agents.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Testori ◽  
M Kempf ◽  
RB Hoyle ◽  
Hedwig Eisenbarth

© 2019 Hogrefe Publishing. Personality traits have been long recognized to have a strong impact on human decision-making. In this study, a sample of 314 participants took part in an online game to investigate the impact of psychopathic traits on cooperative behavior in an iterated Prisoner's dilemma game. We found that disinhibition decreased the maintenance of cooperation in successive plays, but had no effect on moving toward cooperation after a previous defection or on the overall level of cooperation over rounds. Furthermore, our results underline the crucial importance of a good model selection procedure, showing how a poor choice of statistical model can provide misleading results.


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