Norms as emergent properties of adaptive learning: The case of economic routines
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- @Article{dosi:1999:nepal:er,
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author = "Giovanni Dosi and Luigi Marengo and
Andrea Bassanini and Marco Valente",
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title = "Norms as emergent properties of adaptive learning: The
case of economic routines",
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journal = "Journal of Evolutionary Economics",
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year = "1999",
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volume = "9",
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number = "1",
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pages = "5--26",
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming,
computability, oligopoly",
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ISSN = "0936-9937",
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DOI = "doi:10.1007/s001910050073",
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abstract = "Interaction among autonomous decision-makers is
usually modelled in economics in game-theoretic terms
or within the framework of General Equilibrium.
Game-theoretic and General Equilibrium models deal
almost exclusively with the existence of equilibria and
do not analyse the processes which might lead to them.
Even when existence proofs can be given, two questions
are still open. The first concerns the possibility of
multiple equilibria, which game theory has shown to be
the case even in very simple models and which makes the
outcome of interaction unpredictable. The second
relates to the computability and complexity of the
decision procedures which agents should adopt and
questions the possibility of reaching an equilibrium by
means of an algorithmically implementable strategy.
Some theorems have recently proved that in many
economically relevant problems equilibria are not
computable. A different approach to the problem of
strategic interaction is a {"}constructivist{"} one.
Such a perspective, instead of being based upon an
axiomatic view of human behaviour grounded on the
principle of optimisation, focuses on algorithmically
implementable {"}satisfycing{"} decision procedures.
Once the axiomatic approach has been abandoned,
decision procedures cannot be deduced from rationality
assumptions, but must be the evolving outcome of a
process of learning and adaptation to the particular
environment in which the decision must be made. This
paper considers one of the most recently proposed
adaptive learning models: Genetic Programming and
applies it to one the mostly studied and still
controversial economic interaction environment, that of
oligopolistic markets. Genetic Programming evolves
decision procedures, represented by elements in the
space of functions, balancing the exploitation of
knowledge previously obtained with the search of more
productive procedures. The results obtained are
consistent with the evidence from the observation of
the behaviour of real economic agents.",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Giovanni Dosi
Luigi Marengo
Andrea Bassanini
Marco Valente
Citations