English

Quantum decision making by social agents

Physics and Society 2015-10-14 v2 General Finance Quantum Physics

Abstract

The influence of additional information on the decision making of agents, who are interacting members of a society, is analyzed within the mathematical framework based on the use of quantum probabilities. The introduction of social interactions, which influence the decisions of individual agents, leads to a generalization of the quantum decision theory developed earlier by the authors for separate individuals. The generalized approach is free of the standard paradoxes of classical decision theory. This approach also explains the error-attenuation effects observed for the paradoxes occurring when decision makers, who are members of a society, consult with each other, increasing in this way the available mutual information. A precise correspondence between quantum decision theory and classical utility theory is formulated via the introduction of an intermediate probabilistic version of utility theory of a novel form, which obeys the requirement that zero-utility prospects should have zero probability weights.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1202.4918,
  title  = {Quantum decision making by social agents},
  author = {V. I. Yukalov and D. Sornette},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1202.4918},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

This paper has been withdrawn by the authors because a much extended and improved version has been submitted as arXiv:1510.02686 under the new title "Role of information in decision making of social agents"

R2 v1 2026-06-21T20:23:26.855Z