Self-Aware Intelligent Agents in the Prisoner's Dilemma

Resource type
Conference Paper
Authors/contributors
Title
Self-Aware Intelligent Agents in the Prisoner's Dilemma
Abstract
Self-aware individuals are more likely to consider whether their actions are appropriate in terms of public self-consciousness, and to use that information to execute behaviors that match external standards and/or expectations. The learning concepts through which individuals monitor themselves have generally been overlooked by artificial intelligence researchers. Here we report on our attempt to integrate a self-awareness mechanism into an agent's learning architecture. Specifically, we describe (a) our proposal for a self-aware agent model that includes an external learning mechanism and internal cognitive capacity with super-ego and ego characteristics; and (b) our application of a version of the iterated prisoner's dilemma representing conflicts between the public good and private interests to analyze the effects of self-awareness on an agent's individual performance and cooperative behavior. Our results indicate that self-aware agents that consider public self-consciousness utilize rational analysis in a manner that promotes cooperative behavior and supports faster societal movement toward stability. We found that a small number of self-aware agents are sufficient for improving social benefits and resolving problems associated with collective irrational behaviors.
Date
06/2011
Proceedings Title
2011 International Conference on Future Computer Sciences and Application
Conference Name
2011 International Conference on Future Computer Sciences and Application (ICFCSA)
Place
Hong Kong, TBD, China
Publisher
IEEE
Pages
127-131
ISBN
978-1-4577-0317-1
Accessed
3/7/25, 8:04 AM
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Huang, C.-Y., Wang, S.-W., & Sun, C.-T. (2011). Self-Aware Intelligent Agents in the Prisoner’s Dilemma. 2011 International Conference on Future Computer Sciences and Application, 127–131. https://doi.org/10.1109/ICFCSA.2011.36