Abstract
This paper investigates the evolutionary foundation for our ability to attribute preferences to others, an ability that is central to conventional game theory. We argue here that learning others’ preferences allows individuals to efficiently modify their behavior in strategic environments with a persistent element of novelty. Agents with the ability to learn have a sharp, unambiguous advantage over those who are less sophisticated because the former agents extrapolate to novel circumstances information about opponents’ preferences that was learned previously. This advantage holds even with a suitably small cost to reflect the additional cognitive complexity involved.
Publication Date
4-2016
Document Type
Article
Department, Program, or Center
Department of Economics (CLA)
Recommended Citation
Robalino, Nikolaus, and Arthur Robson. 2016. "The Evolution of Strategic Sophistication." American Economic Review, 106(4): 1046-72. DOI: 10.1257/aer.20140105
Campus
RIT – Main Campus
Comments
Copyright 2016 American Economic Association