Peer Designed Agents: Just reflect or also affect?

This work was presented at HAIDM 2014. The 2014 workshop on Human-Agent Interaction Design and Models was co-organised by SmartSociety.

Abstract: Peer Designed Agent (PDA), computer agents developed by non-experts, is an emerging technology, widely advocated in recent literature for the purpose of replacing people in simulations and investigating human behavior. Its main premise is that the strategy programmed into these agents reliably reflect, to some extent, the behavior used by the programmer in real life. In this paper we show that PDA development has an important side effect that has not been addressed to date — the process, that merely attempts to capture one’s strategy, is also likely to affect the developer’s strategy. The phenomenon is demonstrated experimentally via the penetration detection game, using different setting variations. This result has many implications concerning the appropriate design of PDA-based simulations, and the validness of using PDAs for studying individual decision making.

Keywords: PDAs, decision making, simulation design.

Citation: Avshalom Elmalech, David Sarne and Noa Agmon. Peer Designed Agents: Just reflect or also affect?.

Download: http://bit.ly/1NvNHlq

About P. Andreadis

Pre-Doctoral Research Assistant in AI and Social Computation @ University of Edinburgh.

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