Project Details
Description
Many strategic situations are characterized by player's preferences that take into account the well being of others. These preferences guide humans in their choices with whom to participate in economicalor social activities. Little attention has been given to how group formation shapes players' beliefs concerning preferences and how preferences guide the formation of groups.
Here we investigate how these other regarding preferences influence the matching of players, both in pairwise and N-player scenarios, and vice versa how group dynamics shape the beliefs concerning preferences (i.e. formation and adaptation of belief models) of the individual agent's participating in two concrete strategic problems: the dictator game and its extension the trust game.
To solve this problem we combine current computational research on belief modeling and stable matching with the population dynamical models classically used in evolutionary game theory (EGT). Our final aim is to provide insight into how collective systems are shaped by beliefs/preferences models, bringing the abstract results typical for EGT closer to realm of real-world strategic situations.
To ensure the validity of this research, an external partner will investigate experimentally the questions equivalent to those raised in this proposal through a number of behavioral economics experiments. These experiments will not only ensure the validity of the results but they will also guide the research directions followed.
Here we investigate how these other regarding preferences influence the matching of players, both in pairwise and N-player scenarios, and vice versa how group dynamics shape the beliefs concerning preferences (i.e. formation and adaptation of belief models) of the individual agent's participating in two concrete strategic problems: the dictator game and its extension the trust game.
To solve this problem we combine current computational research on belief modeling and stable matching with the population dynamical models classically used in evolutionary game theory (EGT). Our final aim is to provide insight into how collective systems are shaped by beliefs/preferences models, bringing the abstract results typical for EGT closer to realm of real-world strategic situations.
To ensure the validity of this research, an external partner will investigate experimentally the questions equivalent to those raised in this proposal through a number of behavioral economics experiments. These experiments will not only ensure the validity of the results but they will also guide the research directions followed.
| Acronym | FWOAL675 |
|---|---|
| Status | Finished |
| Effective start/end date | 1/01/13 → 31/12/16 |
Keywords
- Applied Biology
Flemish discipline codes in use since 2023
- Systems biology
- Other biological sciences not elsewhere classified
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Research output
- 1 Article
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Avoiding or restricting defectors in public goods games?
Han, T. A., M Pereira, L. & Lenaerts, T., Feb 2015, In: Journal of the Royal Society Interface. 12, 103, 9 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
69 Citations (Scopus)
Datasets
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Experimental data: Inferring strategies from observations in long iterated prisoner's dilemma experiments
Montero, E. (Creator), DRYAD, 25 May 2022
Dataset
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Data from: Delegation to artificial agents fosters prosocial behaviors in the collective risk dilemma
Fernandez Domingos, E. (Creator), Terrucha, I. (Creator), Suchon, R. (Creator), Grujic, J. (Creator), Burguillo, J. C. (Creator) & Lenaerts, T. (Creator), DRYAD, 18 May 2022
Dataset