Evolution of mindsight and psychological commitment among strategically interacting agents (Q725040): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Set profile property. |
Set OpenAlex properties. |
||
Property / full work available at URL | |||
Property / full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.3390/g7030027 / rank | |||
Normal rank | |||
Property / OpenAlex ID | |||
Property / OpenAlex ID: W3124160020 / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Revision as of 19:11, 19 March 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Evolution of mindsight and psychological commitment among strategically interacting agents |
scientific article |
Statements
Evolution of mindsight and psychological commitment among strategically interacting agents (English)
0 references
1 August 2018
0 references
Summary: We study the evolution of strategic psychological capabilities in a population of interacting agents. Specifically, we consider agents which are either blind or with mindsight, and either transparent or opaque. An agent with mindsight can observe the psychological makeup of a transparent agent, i.e., its logic, emotions, commitments and other elements that determine how it chooses actions. A blind agent cannot observe and opaque agents cannot be observed. Our assumption that mindsight and transparency are costly and optional exposes a middle ground between standard game theory without mindsight and evolution of preferences theory with obligatory and costless mindsight. We show that the only evolutionarily stable monomorphic population is one in which all agents are blind, opaque, and act-rational. We find that mindsight, transparency, and rule-rational commitments may evolve, albeit only in a portion of the population that fluctuates in size over generations. We reexamine the ultimatum and trust games in light of our findings and demonstrate that an evolved population of agents can differ significantly from a population of simplistic payoff-maximizers in terms of psychological traits and economic outcomes.
0 references
theory of mind
0 references
mindsight
0 references
evolution of preferences
0 references
psychological commitment
0 references
act-rationality
0 references
rule-rationality
0 references
ultimatum game
0 references
trust game
0 references