Humans copy rapidly increasing choices in a multiarmed bandit problem
Publication date
2010
Authors
Toelch, U.
Bruce, M.J.
Meeus, M.T.H.
Reader, S.M.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2010
Abstract
Conformist social learning, the tendency to acquire the most common trait in a group, allows individuals to rapidly acquire established
beneficial traits from a multitude of options. However, conformist strategies hinder acquisition of novel advantageous behavior patterns,
because such innovations are by definition uncommon. This raises the possibility that proxy cues of the success of novel traits may be utilized
to identify and acquire advantageous innovations and disregard failing options. We show that humans use changes in trait frequency over
time as such a cue in an economic game. Participants played a three-alternative forced choice game (i.e., a multi-armed bandit), using social
information to attempt to locate a high reward that could change location. Participants viewed temporal changes in how many players chose
each option in two successive rounds. Participants supplemented conformist strategies with a “copy-increasing-traits” strategy. That is,
regardless of the traits absolute population frequencies, participants' choices were guided by changes in trait frequencies. Thus, humans can
detect advantageous innovations by monitoring how many individuals adopt these over time, adopting traits increasing in frequency, and
abandoning traits decreasing in frequency. Copying rapidly increasing traits allows identification and acquisition of advantageous
innovations, and is thus potentially key in facilitating their early diffusion and cultural evolution.
Keywords
Innovation, Social learning, Conformist transmission, Cultural evolution