
TL;DR
This paper introduces PBRC, a protocol for belief revision in multi-agent systems that enforces accountability and prevents conformity-driven errors through preregistered evidence triggers and auditability.
Contribution
It proposes a novel mechanism for belief revision that enforces accountability, preserves belief trajectories, and prevents false consensus in multi-agent interactions.
Findings
Social-only rounds cannot increase confidence under PBRC.
Auditable trigger protocols preserve belief trajectories and enable audits.
Enforced trajectories depend only on token-exposure traces, with tight bounds for evidence closure.
Abstract
Deliberative multi-agent systems allow agents to exchange messages and revise beliefs over time. While this interaction is meant to improve performance, it can also create dangerous conformity effects: agreement, confidence, prestige, or majority size may be treated as if they were evidence, producing high-confidence convergence to false conclusions. To address this, we introduce PBRC (Preregistered Belief Revision Contracts), a protocol-level mechanism that strictly separates open communication from admissible epistemic change. A PBRC contract publicly fixes first-order evidence triggers, admissible revision operators, a priority rule, and a fallback policy. A non-fallback step is accepted only when it cites a preregistered trigger and provides a nonempty witness set of externally validated evidence tokens. This ensures that every substantive belief change is both enforceable by a…
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