Title
Cooperation Emergence under Resource-Constrained Peer Punishment.
Abstract
In distributed computational systems with no central authority, social norms have shown great potential in regulating the behaviour of self-interested agents, due to their distributed cost. In this context, peer punishment has been an important instrument in enabling social norms to emerge, and such punishment is usually assigned a certain enforcement cost that is paid by agents applying it. However, models that investigate the use of punishment as a mechanism to allow social norms to emerge usually assume that unlimited resources are available to agents to cope with the resulting enforcement costs, yet this assumption may not hold in real world computational systems, since resources are typically limited and thus need to be used optimally. In this paper, we use a modified version of the metanorm model originally proposed by Axelrod to investigate this, and show that it allows norm emergence only in limited cases under bounded resources. In response, we propose a resource-aware adaptive punishment technique to address this limitation, and give an experimental evaluation of the new technique that shows it enables norm establishment under limited resources.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.5555/2936924.2937056
AAMAS
Keywords
Field
DocType
Metanorm,Emergence,Limited Enforcement Cost
Computer science,Central authority,Computer security,Norm (social),Enforcement,Bounded function,Distributed computing
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
978-1-4503-4239-1
2
0.41
References 
Authors
14
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Samhar Mahmoud1498.73
Simon Miles21599109.29
Michael Luck33440275.97