Graph of Life
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/destifi
23h ago
Graph of Life Hello everyone. I have been working on an evolutionary algorithm based on game theory and graph theory for three years now. In this algorithm complex life emerges through autonomous agents.The nodes are all individuals with their own neural networks. They see each other, make decisions and compete for scarce resources by attacking or defending. They evolve with natural selection and are self organizing. They decide themselves with who they want to interact or not. Reproduction happens at a local level and is dependant on the decisions of the agents. The algorithm happens in ..read more
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Does there exist positive-sum interactions in the real world? Without negative gains to any party
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/eddie_doo
1d ago
submitted by /u/eddie_doo [visit reddit] [comments ..read more
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Graph of Life
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/destifi
4d ago
Hello everyone. I have been working on an evolutionary algorithm based on game theory and graph theory for three years now. In this algorithm complex life emerges through autonomous agents. The nodes are all individuals with their own neural networks. They see each other, make decisions and compete for scarce resources by attacking or defending. They evolve with natural selection and are self organizing. They decide themselves with who they want to interact or not. Reproduction happens at a local level and is dependant on the decisions of the agents. The algorithm happens in discrete iter ..read more
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Need help for a problem
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/Zealousideal_Ad_1954
4d ago
How to solve the problem b and c. I don't understand how the new payoff table came from the previous one. Solution in the comments submitted by /u/Zealousideal_Ad_1954 [visit reddit] [comments ..read more
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Graduation Project Help
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/heromnxpw0
5d ago
Hello Everyone I am a 4th year data science and AI student, I am currently working on my graduation project, the main idea I have in mind now is to take a real world problem that is modeled in game theory and transfer it into the realm of multi-agent reinforcement learning and see what that could teach us about the problem and if it offers a faster or better approach to solving the problem. I also wanted to mess around with generative playing networks but that goes outside the scope of game theory. I want to ask what current real world problems is game theory being used for right now, and wha ..read more
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An Introduction to Game Theory
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/Specialist_Gold8115
5d ago
submitted by /u/Specialist_Gold8115 [visit reddit] [comments ..read more
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[META] Mods, we seriously need to ban homework questions
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/YuptheGup
5d ago
A bunch of people post here just to ask their homework assignments, and it's definitely not the purpose of this sub. Please ban these types of posts submitted by /u/YuptheGup [visit reddit] [comments ..read more
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Strategy advice welcome
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/quellekel
6d ago
Hi all — I have a silly competition app called Music League, in which users create and/or compete in “leagues” with one or more rounds, with each round typically having a different theme or even slightly different rules. For example, a simple league might have a round called something like “Best Love Songs,” another called “Best Dance Songs,” and so on; more complicated leagues/rounds might be something like “Songs with animals in the title” or “Best use of metaphor in a song,” etc. Gameplay works like this: 1) Someone creates the league, decides upon how many rounds it will have, what the th ..read more
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Schelling's model of Segregation and Collusion
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/the_electric_word
6d ago
I've been wondering about the claim that decentralized systems of agents prevent collusion between the agents to produce some (undesirable) outcome. Does Schelling's model of segregation undermine this claim? The system is decentralized - each agent chooses where to move independently. The agents of one group however collude in their preferences to be near members of their group and not the other group, although this collusion is via a preference and not explicitly communicated. The result is segregation, an undesirable outcome. Am I seeing this right? I feel like I've made some sort of error ..read more
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Graph of Life
Reddit : The Science of Strategy!
by /u/destifi
6d ago
Hello everyone. I have been working on an evolutionary algorithm based on game theory and graph theory for three years now. The nodes are all individuals with their own neural networks. They see each other, make decisions and compete by attacking or defending. They evolve with natural selection and are self organizing. They decide themselves with who they want to interact or not. Reproduction happens at a local level and is dependant on the decisions of the agents. The algorithm happens in discrete iterations. Find the code at my github repository: https://github.com/graphoflife Find more ..read more
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