Risk sensitivity and theory of mind in human coordination

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Pedro L. Ferreira (Universidade Técnica de Lisboa)

Francisco C. Santos (Universidade Técnica de Lisboa)

S.D. Gonçalves Melo Pequito (TU Delft - Team Sergio Pequito)

Research Group
Team Sergio Pequito
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009167
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Research Group
Team Sergio Pequito
Issue number
7
Volume number
17
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Abstract

What humans do when exposed to uncertainty, incomplete information, and a dynamic environment influenced by other agents remains an open scientific challenge with important implications in both science and engineering applications. In these contexts, humans handle social situations by employing elaborate cognitive mechanisms such as theory of mind and risk sensitivity. Here we resort to a novel theoretical model, showing that both mechanisms leverage coordinated behaviors among self-regarding individuals. Particularly, we resort to cumulative prospect theory and level-k recursions to show how biases towards optimism and the capacity of planning ahead significantly increase coordinated, cooperative action. These results suggest that the reason why humans are good at coordination may stem from the fact that we are cognitively biased to do so.