In my experience, constant-sum games are considered to provide "maximally unaligned" incentives, and common-payoff games are considered to provide "maximally aligned" incentives. How do we quantitatively interpolate between these two extremes? That is, given an arbitrary payoff table representing a two-player normal-form game (like Prisoner's Dilemma), what extra information do we need in order to produce a real number quantifying agent alignment?
If this question is ill-posed, why is it ill-posed? And if it's not, we should probably understand how to quantify such a basic aspect of multi-agent interactions, if we want to reason about complicated multi-agent situations whose outcomes determine the value of humanity's future. (I started considering this question with Jacob Stavrianos over the last few months, while supervising his SERI project.)
Thoughts:
- Assume the alignment function has range or .
- Constant-sum games should have minimal alignment value, and common-payoff games should have maximal alignment value.
- The function probably has to consider a strategy profile (since different parts of a normal-form game can have different incentives; see e.g. equilibrium selection).
- The function should probably be a function of player A's alignment with player B; for example, in a prisoner's dilemma, player A might always cooperate and player B might always defect. Then it seems reasonable to consider whether A is aligned with B (in some sense), while B is not aligned with A (they pursue their own payoff without regard for A's payoff).
- So the function need not be symmetric over players.
- The function should be invariant to applying a separate positive affine transformation to each player's payoffs; it shouldn't matter whether you add 3 to player 1's payoffs, or multiply the payoffs by a half.
The function may or may not rely only on the players' orderings over outcome lotteries, ignoring the cardinal payoff values. I haven't thought much about this point, but it seems important.EDIT: I no longer think this point is important, but rather confused.
If I were interested in thinking about this more right now, I would:
- Do some thought experiments to pin down the intuitive concept. Consider simple games where my "alignment" concept returns a clear verdict, and use these to derive functional constraints (like symmetry in players, or the range of the function, or the extreme cases).
- See if I can get enough functional constraints to pin down a reasonable family of candidate solutions, or at least pin down the type signature.
I like Vanessa's answer for the fact that it's clearly NOT utility that is in the given payoff matrix. It's not specified what it actually is, but the inclusion of a utility function that transforms the given outcomes into desirability (utility) for the players separates the concept enough to make sense. and then defining alignment as how well player A's utility function supports player B's game-outcome works. Not sure it's useful, but it's sensible.