Learning, Diversity and Adaptation in Changing Environments: The Role of Weak Links

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Date

30 avril 2023

Type de document
Périmètre
Identifiant
  • 2305.00474
Collection

arXiv

Organisation

Cornell University




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Daron Acemoglu et al., « Learning, Diversity and Adaptation in Changing Environments: The Role of Weak Links », arXiv - économie


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Adaptation to dynamic conditions requires a certain degree of diversity. If all agents take the best current action, learning that the underlying state has changed and behavior should adapt will be slower. Diversity is harder to maintain when there is fast communication between agents, because they tend to find out and pursue the best action rapidly. We explore these issues using a model of (Bayesian) learning over a social network. Agents learn rapidly from and may also have incentives to coordinate with others to whom they are connected via strong links. We show, however, that when the underlying environment changes sufficiently rapidly, any network consisting of just strong links will do only a little better than random choice in the long run. In contrast, networks combining strong and weak links, whereby the latter type of links transmit information only slowly, can achieve much higher long-run average payoffs. The best social networks are those that combine a large fraction of agents into a strongly-connected component, while still maintaining a sufficient number of smaller communities that make diverse choices and communicate with this component via weak links.

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