Evolution of collective fairness in complex networks through degree-based role assignment
Andreia Sofia Teixeira, Francisco C. Santos, Alexandre P. Francisco,, Fernando P. Santos

TL;DR
This paper investigates how assigning roles based on node degree in social networks influences fairness in multiplayer Ultimatum Games, showing that low-degree proposer assignment enhances fairness and efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a network-based role assignment strategy that improves fairness and payoff outcomes in multiplayer Ultimatum Games, considering various network and voting configurations.
Findings
Low-degree proposer assignment increases fairness.
Stricter voting rules reduce unfairness from hub nodes.
Efficient role assignment improves population payoff.
Abstract
From social contracts to climate agreements, individuals engage in groups that must collectively reach decisions with varying levels of equality and fairness. These dilemmas also pervade Distributed Artificial Intelligence, in domains such as automated negotiation, conflict resolution or resource allocation. As evidenced by the well-known Ultimatum Game -- where a Proposer has to divide a resource with a Responder -- payoff-maximizing outcomes are frequently at odds with fairness. Eliciting equality in populations of self-regarding agents requires judicious interventions. Here we use knowledge about agents' social networks to implement fairness mechanisms, in the context of Multiplayer Ultimatum Games. We focus on network-based role assignment and show that preferentially attributing the role of Proposer to low-connected nodes increases the fairness levels in a population. We evaluate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies · Evolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior
