论文标题
通过公平的不屈服策略来超越勒索者
Outlearning Extortioners by Fair-minded Unbending Strategies
论文作者
论文摘要
最近的理论表明,利用零确定性(ZD)策略的勒索者可以单方面声称在迭代囚犯的困境中的收益不公平。因此,有人建议,对于固定的勒索者,任何适应的共同游戏都应以充分的合作来征服他们的最佳回应。相比之下,最近的实验表明,人类玩家经常选择不出于对公平性的关注而选择勒索,实际上导致勒索者遭受比自己更多的损失。鉴于此,我们在这里揭示了违反勒索的智慧策略,以使任何最优惠的勒索者最终都会通过在面对面的比赛中提供公平的分歧来承认自己的利益。我们发现并描述了此类不断策略的多个一般类别,包括慷慨的零确定策略和打the,将换档作为特定示例。当针对固定的不打算玩家时,勒索者会被迫,每当打算要求更多不公平的份额时,损失就会增加。我们的分析还涉及回报结构在确定零确定策略的优越性,尤其是其勒索能力方面的重要性。我们表明,如果单方面合作的总收益小于相互叛逃的总收益,则可以使勒索ZD播放器的表现均优于例如赢型换档。不断的策略可用于远离进化勒索商,并催化ZD播放器中类似TIT-FAT的策略的演变。我们的工作对促进公平和抵抗勒索具有影响,以维护一个公正和合作的社会。
Recent theory shows that extortioners taking advantage of the zero-determinant (ZD) strategy can unilaterally claim an unfair share of the payoffs in the Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma. It is thus suggested that against a fixed extortioner, any adapting co-player should be subdued with full cooperation as their best response. In contrast, recent experiments demonstrate that human players often choose not to accede to extortion out of concern for fairness, actually causing extortioners to suffer more loss than themselves. In light of this, here we reveal fair-minded strategies that are unbending to extortion such that any payoff-maximizing extortioner ultimately will concede in their own interest by offering a fair split in head-to-head matches. We find and characterize multiple general classes of such unbending strategies, including generous zero-determinant strategies and Win-Stay, Lose-Shift as particular examples. When against fixed unbending players, extortioners are forced with consequentially increasing losses whenever intending to demand more unfair share. Our analysis also pivots to the importance of payoff structure in determining the superiority of zero-determinant strategies and in particular their extortion ability. We show that an extortionate ZD player can be even outperformed by, for example, Win-Stay Lose-Shift, if the total payoff of unilateral cooperation is smaller than that of mutual defection. Unbending strategies can be used to outlearn evolutionary extortioners and catalyze the evolution of Tit-for-Tat-like strategies out of ZD players. Our work has implications for promoting fairness and resisting extortion so as to uphold a just and cooperative society.