明治学院大学情報科学融合領域センター

2025.12.29 【イベント】Fusion Centerセミナー(話題提供者:Daniel Zizzo先生:University of Queensland)が開催されました(12月16日)

【日 時】 2025年12月16日(火)12:30-13:30

【場 所】白金キャンパス高輪校舎3階(15318教室)

【Zoom】https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82870613580

ミーティングID:828 7061 3580
パスコード:775357

【講演者】Prof. Daniel Zizzo (Dean, School of Economics, The University of Queensland)

【タイトル】
Do You Behave like Sheep? Understanding Compliance and Peer Information Effects
By Ozan Isler and Daniel John Zizzo
(School of Economics, The University of Queensland)
https://www.danielzizzo.com/

【Abstract】
Do agents imitate others even where there is no rational advantage from doing so? Do they rely on information about what peers are doing? Do they comply with peer advice or with a request by an authority? Is rule following itself a motivation? We develop a stylized experimental paradigm to understand whether, in the simplest possible settings that minimize any likelihood of informational or other rational mechanisms, agents react to information about peer behavior and requests from an authority (or from peers). We do this by employing a sequence of online experiments with representative samples of the U.S. population and with pre-registered experimental designs. The basic setup of our online experiments involves a one-shot choice between two options implying the same or different payoffs, with control questions to check for understanding, attention to the task, and reasons for participants’ choices. Our key findings are that, even when it is costly, around 60% of participants comply with a request by an authority. There is no evidence for rule following beyond this. We find no evidence for imitation or for any effect of peer behavior information; and, if it is a peer making a request, this is also ineffective. The results are not aligned with what experts or our generative AI simulations predict. Future research can modify our stylized experimental paradigm to determine what drives real-world conformism.

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