When is tit-for-tat unbeatable?
Computer Science and Game Theory
2013-01-25 v1 Populations and Evolution
Abstract
We characterize the class of symmetric two-player games in which tit-for-tat cannot be beaten even by very sophisticated opponents in a repeated game. It turns out to be the class of exact potential games. More generally, there is a class of simple imitation rules that includes tit-for-tat but also imitate-the-best and imitate-if-better. Every decision rule in this class is essentially unbeatable in exact potential games. Our results apply to many interesting games including all symmetric 2x2 games, and standard examples of Cournot duopoly, price competition, public goods games, common pool resource games, and minimum effort coordination games.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1301.5683,
title = {When is tit-for-tat unbeatable?},
author = {Peter Duersch and Joerg Oechssler and Burkhard C. Schipper},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1301.5683},
year = {2013}
}
Comments
arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1003.4274