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Scaffolding cooperation in human groups with deep reinforcement learning

Computer Science

Scaffolding cooperation in human groups with deep reinforcement learning

K. R. Mckee, A. Tacchetti, et al.

This groundbreaking research conducted by Kevin R. McKee, Andrea Tacchetti, Michiel A. Bakker, Jan Balaguer, Lucy Campbell-Gillingham, Richard Everett, and Matthew Botvinick uses deep reinforcement learning to boost cooperation in human groups, achieving a whopping 77.7% cooperation rate. Discover how a 'social planner' AI can transform cooperation dynamics in network games!

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Abstract
Effective approaches to encouraging group cooperation are still an open challenge. Here we apply recent advances in deep learning to structure networks of human participants playing a group cooperation game. We leverage deep reinforcement learning and simulation methods to train a ‘social planner’ capable of making recommendations to create or break connections between group members. The strategy that it develops succeeds at encouraging pro-sociality in networks of human participants (N = 208 participants in 13 groups) playing for real monetary stakes. Under the social planner, groups finished the game with an average cooperation rate of 77.7%, compared with 42.8% in static networks (N = 176 in 11 groups). In contrast to prior strategies that separate defectors from cooperators (tested here with N = 384 in 24 groups), the social planner learns to take a conciliatory approach to defectors, encouraging them to act pro-socially by moving them to small highly cooperative neighbourhoods.
Publisher
Nature Human Behaviour
Published On
Sep 07, 2023
Authors
Kevin R. McKee, Andrea Tacchetti, Michiel A. Bakker, Jan Balaguer, Lucy Campbell-Gillingham, Richard Everett, Matthew Botvinick
Tags
deep reinforcement learning
cooperation
AI agent
network game
human groups
conciliatory approach
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