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Decoding fairness: A reinforcement learning perspective.

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Human behavior in the ultimatum game (UG) shows a preference for fairness, challenging traditional economic models. This study demonstrates that internal motivations, not external factors, drive fair decision-making through reinforcement learning.

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Area of Science:

  • Behavioral Economics
  • Computational Neuroscience
  • Game Theory

Background:

  • Behavioral experiments on the ultimatum game (UG) show humans prefer fairness, contradicting orthodox economic predictions.
  • Existing explanations often rely on external (exogenous) factors within imitation learning frameworks.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the emergence of fairness in the ultimatum game using a reinforcement learning (RL) paradigm.
  • To determine if endogenous incentives alone can explain fairness without external factors.

Main Methods:

  • Applied Q learning to the ultimatum game, assigning two Q tables per player for proposer and responder roles.
  • Analyzed a two-player scenario, extending to latticed populations with various role assignments (random, fixed, rotating).

Main Results:

  • Fairness emerged prominently in the UG when players valued both experience and future rewards.
  • The probability of successful deals increased with higher offers, aligning with empirical observations.
  • The system exhibited two phases, stabilizing into either fair or rational strategies, robust across different conditions.

Conclusions:

  • Endogenous incentives within a reinforcement learning framework are sufficient to explain the emergence of fairness in the ultimatum game.
  • Exogenous factors are not necessary to account for observed fair behavior in economic decision-making.