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1 eward to one of two alternatives ("potential payoff").
2 r, and influence the environment (i.e., game payoffs).
3 ation would thrive regardless of its average payoff.
4 symmetric payoffs but a slightly lower total payoff.
5 items to cut are those with the longest-term payoff.
6 ve that was most probable or had the largest payoff.
7 ues with gambling outcomes to maximize their payoff.
8 ian interpretation to guarantee considerable payoff.
9 es of key program features would have a high payoff.
10 Individuals reproduce proportional to payoff.
11 o effect on contributions and leads to lower payoff.
12 ted based on the expected time of the larger payoff.
13 ychology, there had better be some important payoff.
14 ers sometimes choose the strategy with lower payoff.
15 or), where each decision offers a stochastic payoff.
16 es choice variability, lowering the expected payoff.
17 ontext value at the cost of slightly reduced payoff.
18 s, while many others receive low or negative payoff.
19 e, disfavors defection but decreases average payoff.
20 ocks, consequently corresponding to a higher payoff.
21 costly punishment applied, increases average payoff.
22 es is optimal if it ensures maximal expected payoff.
23 ions range adaptation maximizes the expected payoff.
24 t because it delays realising a reproductive payoff.
25 by copying the group member with the highest payoff.
26 ed more effort and thereby achieved a higher payoff.
27 e positive correlations between the players' payoffs.
28 dividual decisions interact to determine the payoffs.
29 lay of the strategy leading to the symmetric payoffs.
30 gree of control over both players' long-term payoffs.
31 rate of cooperation typically depends on the payoffs.
32 he agent, who then distributes the coalition payoffs.
33 iduals have complete information about their payoffs.
34 nificantly increased, leading to mutualistic payoffs.
35 se in expected costs also increases expected payoffs.
36 nal and care only about maximizing their own payoffs.
37 and when it does, it enhances group-average payoffs.
38 at entails a conflict between their material payoffs.
39 gh-risk research that could have the largest payoffs.
40 ilibrium of a game with perceived rewards as payoffs.
41 ymmetries and small observable variations in payoffs.
42 smaller immediate payoffs over larger future payoffs.
43 search, model-based strategies led to higher payoffs.
44 require information on others' strategies or payoffs.
45 armers evaluate local conditions to increase payoffs.
46 of one's actions and the value of potential payoffs.
47 odels that assigned utility only to monetary payoffs.
48 equently modifies the commons and associated payoffs.
49 ed choices in decisions that involve delayed payoffs?
50 chnique were subjected to a reduced foraging payoff, 49% of birds switched their behavior to a higher
51 nd crucially, however, on the deviation from payoff additivity that occurs when both interacting indi
54 gs from other studies, support the idea that payoff and prior probability manipulations produce flexi
55 with previous studies, support the idea that payoff and prior probability manipulations produce flexi
58 rce a linear relationship between his or her payoff and that of the opponent even when restricting hi
60 es of not equally distributing the coalition payoff and the long-term concern to keep cooperation goi
61 suggest that a fast guess process, biased by payoff and triggered by stimulus onset, occurred on a su
63 ibria: two equilibria with highly asymmetric payoffs and another equilibrium with symmetric payoffs b
64 t aspect of animal interactions, namely that payoffs and asymmetries may both be imperfectly observed
65 tivational state and controls to what extent payoffs and costs enter the overall evaluation of action
66 osed plasticity rules is suitable to extract payoffs and costs from a prediction error signal if they
69 e, even if this resulted in lower scores and payoffs and even when there was no need to counteract th
71 ndings previously obtained with non-negative payoffs and primary rewards, the animal's choice behavio
72 degree to which there is transparency in the payoffs and risks associated with the decisions agents m
74 where agents make mistakes when judging the payoffs and strategies of others, natural selection favo
76 alue of resources can lead to a reduction in payoffs (and vice versa), both in the immediate- and lon
77 multiplied by reward level to calculate the payoff, and a binary choice task that involved choosing
79 trust, although that reduces their economic payoff, and they do so nonimpulsively and in a very calc
80 ivalent to a donation game with non-additive payoffs, and has previously been analysed for the single
81 foresight - which takes into account future payoffs, and how groupmates respond to one's own strateg
83 earn the language of individuals with a high payoff; and (iii) random learning: children learn the la
88 to that query is known, in situations where payoffs are unknown and the goal is purely epistemic: Th
92 volutionary game theory by allowing players' payoffs as well as their strategies to evolve in respons
93 PFC) encoded the animal's past decisions and payoffs, as well as the conjunction between the two, pro
94 ly-life environment and measured the fitness payoffs associated with the supply of parental care when
96 is assured that she will receive the maximum payoff attainable under the desired payoff relation she
97 ividuals frequently demonstrated the highest-payoff behavior in their repertoire, inadvertently filte
102 hy (EEG) and behavior to examine the role of payoff bias in a difficult two-alternative perceptual de
105 ion of such rules (unbiased social learning, payoff-biased social learning and frequency-dependent bi
107 e acquired via two cognitive mechanisms: (1) payoff-biased transmission-a tendency to copy the most s
109 theory of ZD strategies and improves his own payoff by adaptively changing his strategy following som
111 g competitive games, monkeys increased their payoffs by systematically deviating from a simple heuris
112 ifferent strength according to the coalition payoffs can accept a transfer of power to another player
113 ess in the wild suggest that maximal fitness payoffs can be achieved by shifting offspring production
114 accurate-guessing) predictions, and shift as payoffs change, just as equilibrium theory predicts.
115 ion, and more responsive to past history and payoff changes, than two samples of human choices from e
116 of the anger program reflects the ancestral payoffs characteristic of a small-scale social world rat
118 ted mean, variance, and skewness of possible payoffs, consistent with the idea that sequential choice
120 They do not correspond to direct payments or payoff deductions, but they arise from the repercussions
121 djust their vaccinating strategies and their payoffs depend nonlinearly on whether or not the herd im
123 we consider symmetric games, which means the payoff depends only on the number of players using eithe
125 social environments characterized by a large payoff difference between weak and strong ties, and no g
126 nically on the sensitivity of individuals to payoff difference, but the dependence is non-monotonous
130 fort by incorporating tug-of-war theory into payoff equations from the two main classes of IFD models
131 tive reproductive tactic that yields fitness payoffs equivalent to a non-cooperative route to alpha s
132 n individuals take actions to maximize their payoffs even as their combined payoff is less than the g
133 such, we suggest that rare, high-risk, high-payoff events such as mating and mate competition could
134 ensure that any increase in one player's own payoff exceeds that of the other player by a fixed perce
137 andards, or (ii) low variance in group-level payoffs, fails to predict attitudes about redistribution
138 ply our formulation to a system in which the payoffs favor unilateral defection and cooperation, give
140 ior they try to facilitate leads to the best payoff for all agents on average, and most of the time.
141 pick the larger quantity even when the food payoff for choosing the smaller quantity was increased (
144 nce, consistent with the hypothesis that the payoff for increasing brain size was greater general cog
145 evidence suggesting that these repeats are a payoff for the advantages of having abundant simple-sequ
147 attacker, the knowledge level of the victim, payoffs for different outcomes, and the beliefs of each
148 relative value signal that linearly weights payoffs for self and other, captures key patterns of cho
150 and thus any direct or indirect reproductive payoffs for staying and working are less likely to be lo
151 of birds switched their behavior to a higher-payoff foraging technique after only 14 days, with young
152 egrates three critical factors: the expected payoff from a controlled process, the amount of control
154 he community of cooperators achieve a higher payoff from interactions within the community than membe
156 quences for her: she gets a positive fitness payoff from mating with a "good" male but a negative fit
158 the case of weak selection, which means the payoff from the game is only a small contribution to ove
161 groups of strangers, even if monitoring and payoffs from cooperation were invariant to group size.
166 classes share the feature that knowledge of payoff functions is weakly beneficial for the emergence
167 tiplayer game with non-linear, non-monotonic payoff functions that models the benefits of the acidity
169 d that the error rate is at least 5% and the payoff gain (relative to the status quo) is at least 150
170 ze, such that diffusion is fast whenever the payoff gain from the innovation is sufficiently high and
171 agents interact in small local clusters, the payoff gain of the innovation relative to the status quo
174 increased, but that the successful-defection-payoff has less impact on the weight of individuals and
175 so suggests that punishment can only enforce payoff-improving strategies, contrary to a widely cited
177 f cooperation is so extreme that the average payoff in a population can decline even as the potential
179 Rejecting low offers increases relative payoff in pairwise competition between two strategies an
183 sense of being able to appropriate 'surplus' payoffs in each interaction, which is selected for withi
187 ow that countergeoengineering generates high payoff inequality as well as heavy welfare losses, resul
191 on-signaled strategic information, including payoffs, intentions of the other player, reward outcomes
193 and choice efficacy, such that the expected payoff is highest for decisions in an intermediate value
195 aximize their payoffs even as their combined payoff is less than the global maximum had the players c
198 ces that were less influenced by anticipated payoff magnitudes and were more driven by recent negativ
199 ategies: fair strategies ensure that the own payoff matches the average payoff of the group; extortio
201 These equilibrium solutions assume that the payoff matrices under each behavioural context are ident
206 hich the positive and negative values of its payoff matrix were realized by the delivery and removal
208 space is equivalent to making changes in the payoff matrix, and once this is done, the behavior of th
217 make their decisions either based purely on payoff maximization or by imitating the vaccination beha
218 that individuals for whom trustworthiness is payoff-maximizing will find TPP to be less net costly (f
219 First, cooperation is a rational (expected payoff-maximizing) response to incorrect beliefs about t
221 ssing no information about others' traits or payoffs, mobility (via self-propulsion or environmental
223 at are able to unilaterally set the expected payoff of an opponent in iterated plays of the Prisoner'
227 sure that the own payoff matches the average payoff of the group; extortionate strategies allow a pla
228 r obtains an advantageous share of the total payoff of the players, and the other players best respon
229 t, our results indicate that the equilibrium payoff of the population can be increased if players som
234 ows that simply understanding the behavioral payoffs of existing games is insufficient to make predic
235 kind, when combined with inequalities in the payoffs of fighting, can lead to the evolution of severe
236 y punishment may actually reduce the average payoffs of group members in comparison with groups in wh
237 However, most previous studies assume that payoffs of individuals are fully determined by the strat
239 ring the alternating condition increased the payoffs of mutual prosociality, and prosocial choice inc
240 hich individuals directly value the material payoffs of others, i.e., generosity, and (2) the extent
243 ing the successful strategy according to the payoffs of the last round of the game, and then analyse
245 clines translated into sexually antagonistic payoffs: old males fertilized more eggs when they were d
246 proposed stochastic evolutionary model where payoff only weakly drives evolution and individuals can
248 s model suggests that the salience of larger payoffs played a critical role in determining the value
250 h a novel strategy that would increase their payoffs provided that it is also adopted by their neighb
251 maximum payoff attainable under the desired payoff relation she imposes, without knowing how the oth
252 he capacity for strategic thinking about the payoff-relevant actions of conspecifics is not well unde
253 We consider decision makers who know that payoff-relevant observations are generated by a process
255 ifically, velocity initially falls as rising payoffs reward the interactions among the more stationar
256 by combining conformist social learning with payoff-sensitive individual reinforcement (updating of e
258 played the strategies leading to asymmetric payoffs significantly more frequently than study partici
263 rock-paper-scissors games, the nontransitive payoff structure of which means that unilateral control
265 rtainty, and impacts culture via group-level payoff structures that define individualism and collecti
270 ooperative behaviors may reveal the greatest payoff to social science research of all agent-based mod
272 wnplays the importance of differences in the payoffs to behaviours in the present and how these payof
273 s to predators), which 'equivalates' fitness payoffs to both risk-takers (red non-droppers) and risk-
274 s have no intrinsic meaning or effect on the payoffs to individuals, yet beliefs/superstitions regard
276 l mating rates for males are higher, fitness payoffs to monogamy and the maintenance of a single part
277 reased the level of cooperation, the average payoffs to players, and the assortativity between cooper
280 f economic games that measured concern about payoffs to themselves and to others: dictator, ultimatum
281 pulation level with a sub-optimal per capita payoff towards which irrigation systems tend to gravitat
282 diness potential (LRP) on a subset of biased payoff trials contralateral to the higher-paying alterna
283 clude that rats are able maintain a constant payoff under changing sensory conditions by flexibly adj
284 nterest, information use, and contingency of payoff under environmental variation that may be applied
291 Offering more than you demand increases payoff when many strategies are present simultaneously a
292 plies that humans do not consider neighbors' payoffs when making their decisions in this dilemma but
293 e frequently and earned significantly higher payoffs when matched with other study participants from
294 reward leads to increased contributions and payoff, whereas punishment has no effect on contribution
295 ires that decision makers (i) believe future payoffs will occur and (ii) are not forced to take the i
296 ls may be both less likely to believe future payoffs will occur and less able to forego immediate rew
298 rporates terms for the disutility of unequal payoffs, with parameters that index behaviors normally e
299 imization to the distortion of the perceived payoffs, with some followers being more receptive than o
300 o exert a physical effort knowing that their payoff would be proportional to their effort duration.