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Research on Culture
The performance of economic and political
institutions depends upon culture. But what is culture? Is it
status hierarchies? Is it behavior? Is it beliefs? Is it a belief
system? Is it a means for choosing among equilibria? Or is it all
these things? In this project, Jenna Bednar and I construct
models of culture that build from standard game theoretic models
of institutions. In our conception, culture consists of mental
models that are consistent both within and between people in a
community that which may sometimes result in suboptimal
behavior.
Our models consider ensembles of institutions. We show that
institutions shape culture and culture in turn influences the
performance of institutions. Thus, choices over institutions can
be, and likely are, dependent on previous institutional choices
through their effect on culture. Conceptually, our approach
considers culture to be both the initial point and the adjustment
rule within a dynamical system. That adjustment rule may preclude
some choices that increase welfare, thereby creating equilibria
in the ensemble setting which would not exist were the
institutions to be considered in isolation.
The incentives to coordinate are central to our analysis as they
are in many other models of culture, including the model
constructed by our colleague Robert Axelrod. Most people's
exposure to coordination problems is limited to binary action
pure coordination games: drive on left or right, or shake or bow.
But, coordination often takes place on many dimensions
simultaneously. It also occurs within and between individuals. We
want to remain consistent within ourselves and we want also to be
like others. To show how interesting these multi domain models
can be, we have included some simple examples that were
constructed under our guidance by Aaron Bramson.
Papers
Games Theory and Culture in Rationality and Society
(with Jenna Bednar)
Institutional Path Dependence (with
Jenna Bednar)
Conformity, Consistency and Cultural
Heterogeneity (with Jenna Bednar, Aaron Bramson, and Andrea
Jones-Rooy)
Rates of Convergence in a Generalized
Voter Model (with Len Sander and Casey Schneider -
Mizel)
Netlogo Models
Netlogo models of culture (written
by Aaron Bramson)
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