Iterated crowdsourcing dilemma game

Oishi, Koji; Cebrian, Manuel; Masuda, Naoki

Abstract

The Internet has enabled the emergence of collective problem solving, also known as crowdsourcing, as a viable option for solving complex tasks. However, the openness of crowdsourcing presents a challenge because solutions obtained by it can be sabotaged, stolen, and manipulated at a low cost for the attacker. We extend a previously proposed crowdsourcing dilemma game to an iterated game to address this question. We enumerate pure evolutionarily stable strategies within the class of so-called reactive strategies, i.e., those depending on the last action of the opponent. Among the 4096 possible reactive strategies, we find 16 strategies each of which is stable in some parameter regions. Repeated encounters of the players can improve social welfare when the damage inflicted by an attack and the cost of attack are both small. Under the current framework, repeated interactions do not really ameliorate the crowdsourcing dilemma in a majority of the parameter space.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000331296300004 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volumen: 4
Editorial: NATURE PORTFOLIO
Fecha de publicación: 2014
DOI:

10.1038/srep04100

Notas: ISI