• What math can teach us about standing up

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Jun 27 22:30:34 2023
    What math can teach us about standing up to bullies
    Game theory study shows that being uncooperative gives weaker parties the upper hand

    Date:
    June 27, 2023
    Source:
    Dartmouth College
    Summary:
    New research from Dartmouth takes a fresh look at game theory
    to show that being uncooperative can help people on the weaker
    side of a power dynamic achieve a more equal outcome -- and even
    inflict some loss on their abusive counterpart. The findings
    can be applied to help equalize the balance of power in labor
    negotiations, international relations and everyday interactions,
    as well as integrate cooperation into interconnected AI systems
    such as driverless cars.


    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIN Email

    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    In a time of income inequality and ruthless politics, people with
    outsized power or an unrelenting willingness to browbeat others often
    seem to come out ahead.

    New research from Dartmouth, however, shows that being uncooperative
    can help people on the weaker side of the power dynamic achieve a more
    equal outcome - - and even inflict some loss on their abusive counterpart.

    The findings provide a tool based in game theory -- the field of
    mathematics focused on optimizing competitive strategies -- that could be applied to help equalize the balance of power in labor negotiations or international relations and could even be used to integrate cooperation
    into interconnected artificial intelligence systems such as driverless
    cars.

    Published in the latest issue of the journalPNAS Nexus,the study takes
    a fresh look at what are known in game theory as "zero-determinant
    strategies" developed by renowned scientists William Press, now at
    the University of Texas at Austin, and the late Freeman Dyson at the
    Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.

    Zero-determinant strategies dictate that "extortionists" control
    situations to their advantage by becoming less and less cooperative --
    though just cooperative enough to keep the other party engaged -- and by
    never being the first to concede when there's a stalemate. Theoretically,
    they will always outperform their opponent by demanding and receiving
    a larger share of what's at stake.

    But the Dartmouth paper uses mathematical models of interactions to
    uncover an "Achilles heel" to these seemingly uncrackable scenarios,
    said senior author Feng Fu, an associate professor of mathematics. Fu
    and first author Xingru Chen, who received her Ph.D. in mathematics from Dartmouth in 2021, discovered an "unbending strategy" in which resistance
    to being steamrolled not only causes an extortionist to ultimately lose
    more than their opponent but can result in a more equal outcome as the overbearing party compromises in a scramble to get the best payoff.

    "Unbending players who choose not to be extorted can resist by refusing
    to fully cooperate. They also give up part of their own payoff, but
    the extortioner loses even more," said Chen, who is now an assistant
    professor at the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications.

    "Our work shows that when an extortioner is faced with an unbending
    player, their best response is to offer a fair split, thereby guaranteeing
    an equal payoff for both parties," she said. "In other words, fairness
    and cooperation can be cultivated and enforced by unbending players."
    These scenarios frequently play out in the real world, Fu said. Labor
    relations provide a poignant model. A large corporation can strong-arm suppliers and producers such as farmworkers to accept lower prices
    for their effort by threatening to replace them and cut them off from
    a lucrative market. But a strike or protest can turn the balance of
    power back toward the workers' favor and result in more fairness and cooperation, such as when a labor union wins some concessions from
    an employer.

    While the power dynamic in these scenarios is never equal, Fu said,
    his and Chen's work shows that unbending players can reap benefits by
    defecting from time to time and sabotaging what extortioners are truly
    after -- the highest payoff for themselves.

    "The practical insight from our work is for weaker parties to be unbending
    and resist being the first to compromise, thereby transforming the
    interaction into an ultimatum game in which extortioners are incentivized
    to be fairer and more cooperative to avoid 'lose-lose' situations,"
    Fu said.

    "Consider the dynamics of power between dominant entities such as
    Donald Trump and the lack of unbending from the Republican Party, or,
    on the other hand, the military and political resistance to Russia's
    invasion of Ukraine that has helped counteract incredible asymmetry," he
    said. "These results can be applied to real-world situations, from social equity and fair pay to developing systems that promote cooperation among
    AI agents, such as autonomous driving." Chen and Fu's paper expands
    the theoretical understanding of zero-determinant interactions while
    also outlining how the outsized power of extortioners can be checked,
    said mathematician Christian Hilbe, leader of the Dynamics of Social
    Behavior research group at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary
    Biology in Germany "Among the technical contributions, they stress
    that even extortioners can be outperformed in some games. I don't think
    that has been fully appreciated by the community before," said Hilbe,
    who was not involved in the study but is familiar with it. "Among the conceptual insights, I like the idea of unbending strategies, behaviors
    that encourage an extortionate player to eventually settle at a fairer outcome." Behavioral research involving human participants has shown
    that extortioners may constitute a significant portion of our everyday interactions, said Hilbe, who published a 2016 paper in the journal
    PLOS ONE reporting just that. He also co-authored a 2014 study in Nature Communications that found people playing against a computerized opponent strongly resisted when the computer engaged in threatening conduct,
    even when it reduced their own payout.

    "The empirical evidence to date suggests that people do engage in these extortionate behaviors, especially in asymmetric situations, and that
    the extorted party often tries to resist it, which is then costly to
    both parties," Hilbe said.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Mind_&_Brain
    # Social_Psychology # Numeracy # Psychology
    o Computers_&_Math
    # Mathematics # Video_Games # Computer_Science
    o Science_&_Society
    # Industrial_Relations # Energy_Issues # Economics
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Political_science o Game_theory o Industrial_relations o
    Alternative_fuel_vehicle o Traffic_engineering_(transportation)
    o Bioinformatics o National_security o Vehicle_propulsion

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Dartmouth_College. Original written
    by Morgan Kelly.

    Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Xingru Chen, Feng Fu. Outlearning extortioners: unbending
    strategies can
    foster reciprocal fairness and cooperation. PNAS Nexus, 2023; 2
    (6) DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgad176 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230627123108.htm

    --- up 1 year, 17 weeks, 1 day, 10 hours, 50 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (1:317/3)