Sender-receiver games are simple models of information transmission that provide a formalism to study the evolution of honest signaling and deception between a sender and a receiver. In many practical scenarios, lies often affect groups of receivers, which inevitably entangles the payoffs of individuals to the payoffs of other agents in their group, and this makes the formalism of pairwise sender-receiver games inapt for where it might be useful the most. We therefore introduce group interactions among receivers and study how their interconnectedness in higher-order social networks affects the evolution of lying. We observe a number of counterintuitive results that are rooted in the complexity of the underlying evolutionary dynamics, which ...
Online information ecosystems are now central to our everyday social interactions. Of the many oppor...
In this paper we present a game-theoretical model of rumour propagation on social networks. Agents f...
Previous experiments have shown that the possibility to punish liars does not per se increase honest...
Sender-receiver games are simple models of information transmission that provide a formalism to stud...
Lies can have a negating impact on governments, companies, and the society as a whole. Understanding...
In this paper, we examine the role of lies in human social relations by implementing some salient ch...
Honesty plays a crucial role in any situation where organisms exchange information or resources. Dis...
Lies can have profoundly negative consequences for individuals, groups and even for societies. Under...
When facing dishonest behavior of any form, individuals may choose to punish in order to enhance fut...
A recent experimental study of Cai and Wang (2005) on strategic in-formation transmission reveals th...
A recent experimental study of cai and wang [cai, h., wang, j., 2006. Overcommunication in strategic...
We run an experimental study using sender-receiver games to evaluate how senders' willingness to lie...
The modelling of deceptions in game theory and decision theory has not been well studied, despite th...
The modelling of deceptions in game theory and decision theory has not been well studied, despite th...
The evolution of costly cooperation between selfish individuals seems to contradict Darwinian select...
Online information ecosystems are now central to our everyday social interactions. Of the many oppor...
In this paper we present a game-theoretical model of rumour propagation on social networks. Agents f...
Previous experiments have shown that the possibility to punish liars does not per se increase honest...
Sender-receiver games are simple models of information transmission that provide a formalism to stud...
Lies can have a negating impact on governments, companies, and the society as a whole. Understanding...
In this paper, we examine the role of lies in human social relations by implementing some salient ch...
Honesty plays a crucial role in any situation where organisms exchange information or resources. Dis...
Lies can have profoundly negative consequences for individuals, groups and even for societies. Under...
When facing dishonest behavior of any form, individuals may choose to punish in order to enhance fut...
A recent experimental study of Cai and Wang (2005) on strategic in-formation transmission reveals th...
A recent experimental study of cai and wang [cai, h., wang, j., 2006. Overcommunication in strategic...
We run an experimental study using sender-receiver games to evaluate how senders' willingness to lie...
The modelling of deceptions in game theory and decision theory has not been well studied, despite th...
The modelling of deceptions in game theory and decision theory has not been well studied, despite th...
The evolution of costly cooperation between selfish individuals seems to contradict Darwinian select...
Online information ecosystems are now central to our everyday social interactions. Of the many oppor...
In this paper we present a game-theoretical model of rumour propagation on social networks. Agents f...
Previous experiments have shown that the possibility to punish liars does not per se increase honest...