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Two-stage N-person Prisoner's Dilemma with Social Preferences

Published: 08 May 2019 Publication History

Abstract

We examine two-stage games where all players choose the parameters of social preferences at the first stage and play the n-person prisoner's dilemma at the second stage with perfect and imperfect information. This model expresses situations where players can choose how much they depend on the other players' payoffs. In this model, we get the following results. If the game has perfect information, cooperation among all players can be attained in an equilibrium by punishing a deviating player. If each player plays the n-person prisoner's dilemma without knowing the choices of the other players at the first stage, cooperation among a constant number of players can be attained in an equilibrium. In addition, we study two-stage games where all players choose how much they are concerned with the social welfare at the first stage and play the n-person prisoner's dilemma at the second stage. We show that when the players are more concerned with the minimum payoff, the number of players who cooperate at the second stage in an equilibrium weakly decreases.

References

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James Andreoni and John Miller. 2002. Giving according to GARP: An experimental test of the consistency of preferences for altruism. Econometrica, Vol. 70, 2 (2002), 737--753.
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Gary Charness and Matthew Rabin. 2002. Understanding social preferences with simple tests. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 117, 3 (2002), 817--869.
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Armin Falk, Ernst Fehr, and Urs Fischbacher. 2008. Testing theories of fairness--Intentions matter. Games and Economic Behavior, Vol. 62, 1 (2008), 287--303.
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Ernst Fehr and Klaus M Schmidt. 1999. A theory of fairness, competition, and cooperation. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 114, 3 (1999), 817--868.
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Ehud Kalai. 1981. Preplay negotiations and the prisoner's dilemma. Mathematical Social Sciences, Vol. 1, 4 (1981), 375--379.
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Ko Nishihara. 1997. A resolution of N-person prisoners' dilemma. Economic Theory, Vol. 10, 3 (1997), 531--540.
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Akira Okada. 1993. The possibility of cooperation in an n-person prisoners' dilemma with institutional arrangements. Public Choice, Vol. 77, 3 (1993), 629--656.
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Hal R Varian. 1994. A solution to the problem of externalities when agents are well-informed. The American Economic Review (1994), 1278--1293.

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cover image ACM Conferences
AAMAS '19: Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and MultiAgent Systems
May 2019
2518 pages
ISBN:9781450363099

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International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems

Richland, SC

Publication History

Published: 08 May 2019

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Author Tags

  1. non-cooperative game
  2. prisoner's dilemma
  3. social preference

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  • Research-article

Funding Sources

  • JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number JP 17H00761

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AAMAS '19
Sponsor:

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AAMAS '19 Paper Acceptance Rate 193 of 793 submissions, 24%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 1,155 of 5,036 submissions, 23%

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