Cooperation and Reputation Dynamics with Reinforcement Learning
Nicolas Anastassacos, Julian Garc\'ia, Stephen Hailes, Mirco Musolesi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how reinforcement learning agents develop cooperation through reputation mechanisms, identifying coordination challenges and proposing simple interventions to stabilize cooperative behavior in decentralized systems.
Contribution
It introduces a model showing how reputation-based cooperation faces coordination issues and demonstrates effective solutions like seeding fixed agents and intrinsic rewards to promote stable cooperation.
Findings
Reputation mechanisms create coordination problems with multiple equilibria.
Standard reinforcement learning often converges to undesirable equilibria.
Seeding fixed agents and intrinsic rewards effectively stabilize cooperation.
Abstract
Creating incentives for cooperation is a challenge in natural and artificial systems. One potential answer is reputation, whereby agents trade the immediate cost of cooperation for the future benefits of having a good reputation. Game theoretical models have shown that specific social norms can make cooperation stable, but how agents can independently learn to establish effective reputation mechanisms on their own is less understood. We use a simple model of reinforcement learning to show that reputation mechanisms generate two coordination problems: agents need to learn how to coordinate on the meaning of existing reputations and collectively agree on a social norm to assign reputations to others based on their behavior. These coordination problems exhibit multiple equilibria, some of which effectively establish cooperation. When we train agents with a standard Q-learning algorithm in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Game Theory and Applications · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence
MethodsQ-Learning
