This link has been bookmarked by 206 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Jul 2017, by someone privately.
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16 May 18Hélène Laxenaire
Jeu sérieux permettant de comprendre la théorie du jeu et notamment les phénomènes de confiance et de trahison. Cependant ces explications ne prennent en compte que le gain, et pas d'autres choses comme la satisfaction morale. Super bien fait.
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03 May 18
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28 Apr 18
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12 Apr 18Magnus Sandberg
Superkult! Engelsk, norsk, samfunnsfag, matte, krle (og programmering) måkt inn i ett fantastisk lite spill! Wow! Mekker noe undervisningsopplegg og legger ut. #spilliskolen https://t.co/1342UooPl9
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09 Mar 18
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07 Dec 17
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Game theory has shown us the three things we need for the evolution of trust:1. REPEAT INTERACTIONSTrust keeps a relationship going, but you need the knowledge of possible future repeat interactions before trust can evolve.2. POSSIBLE WIN-WINSYou must be playing a non-zero-sum game, a game where it's at least possible that both players can be better off -- a win-win.3. LOW MISCOMMUNICATIONIf the level of miscommunication is too high, trust breaks down. But when there's a little bit of miscommunication, it pays to be more forgiving.Of course, real-world trust is affected by much more than this. There's reputation, shared values, contracts, cultural markers, blah blah blah. And let's not forget.
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So, it seems the math of game theory is telling us something: that Copycat's philosophy, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you", may be not just a moral truth, but also a mathematical truth. However......there's a problem: →ON<!-- TRANSLATE THIS -->OFF<!-- TRANSLATE THIS -->
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27 Nov 17
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25 Nov 17
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20 Nov 17
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24 Oct 17
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msailer
Shows how different strategies of trust affect the population of the ones showing this trait.
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02 Oct 17lukasdiigo
This is a very interesting game developed by Nicky Case. It teaches basic game theory. Audience is unspecified (should be suitable for college students or adult, probably for middle school students)
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25 Sep 17
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10 Sep 17
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09 Sep 17
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05 Sep 17
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03 Sep 17
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31 Aug 17
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30 Aug 17modo_lv
@ockhamsbeard Check this out: https://t.co/S3QcuxMPwL
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29 Aug 17Alvar Maciel
Trust us: new CC0 game by @ncasenmare on game theory and trust is both addictive and educational https://t.co/xOg2riD1bS
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28 Aug 17
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26 Aug 17secconomics
Really good example of the ways in which different forms of competition emerge from oligopoly situations.
Year 2 Economics extension Game Theory oligopoly Competition
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23 Aug 17
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22 Aug 17
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21 Aug 17Florence Canet
Les gens ne se font plus confiance. Un guide interactif sur la théorie du jeu de la confiance : https://t.co/L4Wq4a8eq8
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18 Aug 17
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16 Aug 17
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14 Aug 17
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11 Aug 17
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apt1002
Excellent illustration of iterated prisoners' dilemma. Via Frabcus.
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Andrea Back
Learn why this is wisdom: Do what you can do, to create the conditions necessary to evolve trust. Build relationships. Find win-wins. Communicate clearly.
trust elearning Spieltheorie lehre erklärvideo game theory newsletter
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10 Aug 17
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09 Aug 17Garry Golden
trust content blockchain video
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08 Aug 17
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Peggy George
The Evolution of Trust - a really clever way to learn about game theory through play & complexity. https://t.co/qqVZcKMFDg Ping @AdamMGrant
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07 Aug 17
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06 Aug 17
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05 Aug 17
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Muzaffaruddin Alvi
via All News on 'The Twitter Times: Muzaffar69/corpgov' http://bit.ly/1Sto0U9
#CorpGov All News on 'The Twitter Times: Muzaffar69_corpgov'
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Nader Ale Ebrahim
Interactive guide to the game theory of trust is now OUT!
by @ncasenmare -->
https://t.co/0oyR9nPt5u https://t.co/yM1XvGe1Ch -
04 Aug 17Shauna Hedgepeth
Well, this is thoroughly incredibly good.
https://t.co/ptX0deNNB0 -
03 Aug 17
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02 Aug 17
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01 Aug 17
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31 Jul 17
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Felicia Sullivan
how to turn a zero-sum game into a non-zero-sum game. Be a copykitten.
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dean groom
@alphasystech: RT @BuzzyTVGames: Using game theory to illustrate the evolution of trust in society. https://t.co/FbUAPd2Fvd from @ncasenmare #gbl #gamedev #games4ed GBL REFERENCE FROM TWITTER.
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30 Jul 17Koen Pellegrims
*Vertrouwen* als speltheorie. Dit was een fantastische 30min van m'n tijd: https://t.co/ZK6hgFF8Wg https://t.co/EoR5StmGWG
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Elisa Ferrari
"a little bit of miscommunication leads to forgiveness, but too much leads to widespread distrust" #GameTheory https://t.co/xSOhbIaVav
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George Panagiotakopoulos
People no longer trust each other. Why? And how can we fix it? An interactive guide to the game theory of trust: https://t.co/aCx9XwBSZp
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29 Jul 17Jimmy Royer
"During World War I, peace broke out.
It was Christmas 1914 on the Western Front.
Despite strict orders not to chillax with the enemy, British
and German soldiers left their trenches, crossed No Man's Land,
and gathered to bury their dead, exchange gifts, and play games.
Meanwhile: it's 2017, the West has been at peace for decades, and
wow, we suck at trust. Surveys show that, over the past forty years, fewer and fewer people say they trust each other. So here's our puzzle:
Why, even in peacetime, do friends become enemies?
And why, even in wartime, do enemies become friends?
I think game theory can help explain our epidemic of distrust –
and how we can fix it! So, to understand all this..." -
François Parmentier
https://t.co/bKwiBQB081 is wonderful. Everybody should takes 15 minutes to play with it and learn some really important lessons.
Prisoner's dilemma explained with small online game. Beyond mathematics, applies so often IRL... https://t.co/17hyg0Me8b -
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Always Cheats became a victim of their own success!
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if you don't play enough rounds, (here: 5 or less) ALWAYS CHEAT dominates.
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Here's a world filled entirely with Always Cooperates, except for one Always Cheat and one Copycat.
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Copycat goes by many names. The Golden Rule, reciprocal altruism, tit for tat, or... live and let live.
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What the game is, defines what the players do.
Our problem today isn't just that people are losing trust,
it's that our environment acts against the evolution of trust. -
In 1985, when Americans were asked how many close friends they had, the most common answer was "three". In 2004, the most common answer was "zero". We now have fewer friends across class, racial, economic, and political lines, because we have fewer friends -- period. And as you just discovered for yourself, the fewer "repeat interactions" there are, the more distrust will spread.
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That's surprising that with an even meaner starting population, Copykitten, a more forgiving version of Copycat, was the most successful!
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You were correct -- Simpleton wins! This is because Simpleton is actually capable of exploiting Always Cooperate. They both start cooperating, but if Simpleton makes a mistake and cheats, since Always Cooperate never retaliates, it'll keep cheating them.
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This is why "miscommunication" is such an interesting barrier to trust: a little bit of it leads to forgiveness, but too much and it leads to widespread distrust!
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"We are punished by our sins, not for them."
~ Elbert Hubbard -
In the short run, the game defines the players. But in the long run, it's us players who define the game.
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28 Jul 17
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Kenyth Zeng
The Evolution of Trust: play the game of game theory of trust https://t.co/Qi9HJlKGm1
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nikerym
via Instapaper: Unread http://ift.tt/UvJzr1
Game theory for EVERYONE! Mini masterpiece of graph theory, stats, and effective web design. A must play https://t.co/n93felXXx4
— Andrea Levinge (@DreLevinge) July 30, 2017 -
27 Jul 17
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