International audienceTo make decisions in a social context, humans have to predict the behavior of others, an ability that is thought to rely on having a model of other minds known as "theory of mind." Such a model becomes especially complex when the number of people one simultaneously interacts with is large and actions are anonymous. Here, we present results from a group decision-making task known as the volunteer's dilemma and demonstrate that a Bayesian model based on partially observable Markov decision processes outperforms existing models in quantitatively predicting human behavior and outcomes of group interactions. Our results suggest that in decision-making tasks involving large groups with anonymous members, humans use Bayesian ...
Human social behavior is structured by relationships. We form teams, groups, tribes, and alliances a...
Griffiths and Tenenbaum (2006) asked individuals to make predictions about the duration or extent of...
Observing the actions of other people allows us to learn not only about their mental states, but als...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021Existing computational models of decision making are o...
Other people's mental states---what they want, what they know, and how they combine the two to act--...
Here we focus on the description of the mechanisms behind the process of information ag-gregation an...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
This thesis proposes a computational framework for understanding human Theory of Mind (ToM): our con...
Here we focus on the description of the mechanisms behind the process of information aggregation and...
With a principled methodology for systematic design of human–robot decision-making teams as a motiva...
In games of social learning individuals tend to give too much weight to their own private informatio...
Despite a large body of experimental data demonstrating consistent group outcomes in social dilemmas...
Collaboration requires agents to coordinate their behavior on the fly, sometimes cooperating to solv...
Human social behavior is structured by relationships. We form teams, groups, tribes, and alliances a...
Griffiths and Tenenbaum (2006) asked individuals to make predictions about the duration or extent of...
Observing the actions of other people allows us to learn not only about their mental states, but als...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021Existing computational models of decision making are o...
Other people's mental states---what they want, what they know, and how they combine the two to act--...
Here we focus on the description of the mechanisms behind the process of information ag-gregation an...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
This thesis proposes a computational framework for understanding human Theory of Mind (ToM): our con...
Here we focus on the description of the mechanisms behind the process of information aggregation and...
With a principled methodology for systematic design of human–robot decision-making teams as a motiva...
In games of social learning individuals tend to give too much weight to their own private informatio...
Despite a large body of experimental data demonstrating consistent group outcomes in social dilemmas...
Collaboration requires agents to coordinate their behavior on the fly, sometimes cooperating to solv...
Human social behavior is structured by relationships. We form teams, groups, tribes, and alliances a...
Griffiths and Tenenbaum (2006) asked individuals to make predictions about the duration or extent of...
Observing the actions of other people allows us to learn not only about their mental states, but als...