Department of Philosophy, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 May 27;5(5):e10688. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010688.
Decision analysis and game theory have proved useful tools in various biodiversity conservation planning and modeling contexts. This paper shows how game theory may be used to inform group decisions in biodiversity conservation scenarios by modeling conflicts between stakeholders to identify Pareto-inefficient Nash equilibria. These are cases in which each agent pursuing individual self-interest leads to a worse outcome for all, relative to other feasible outcomes. Three case studies from biodiversity conservation contexts showing this feature are modeled to demonstrate how game-theoretical representation can inform group decision-making.
The mathematical theory of games is used to model three biodiversity conservation scenarios with Pareto-inefficient Nash equilibria: (i) a two-agent case involving wild dogs in South Africa; (ii) a three-agent raptor and grouse conservation scenario from the United Kingdom; and (iii) an n-agent fish and coral conservation scenario from the Philippines. In each case there is reason to believe that traditional mechanism-design solutions that appeal to material incentives may be inadequate, and the game-theoretical analysis recommends a resumption of further deliberation between agents and the initiation of trust--and confidence--building measures.
Game theory can and should be used as a normative tool in biodiversity conservation contexts: identifying scenarios with Pareto-inefficient Nash equilibria enables constructive action in order to achieve (closer to) optimal conservation outcomes, whether by policy solutions based on mechanism design or otherwise. However, there is mounting evidence that formal mechanism-design solutions may backfire in certain cases. Such scenarios demand a return to group deliberation and the creation of reciprocal relationships of trust.
决策分析和博弈论已被证明是各种生物多样性保护规划和建模情境下的有用工具。本文展示了博弈论如何通过建模利益相关者之间的冲突来为生物多样性保护场景中的群体决策提供信息,以识别帕累托非有效的纳什均衡。这些情况是指每个追求自身利益的参与者相对于其他可行的结果,导致所有参与者的结果都更糟。本文通过三个来自生物多样性保护情境的案例研究来展示博弈论的代表性如何为群体决策提供信息。
使用博弈论的数学理论来模拟三个具有帕累托非有效的纳什均衡的生物多样性保护场景:(i)涉及南非野狗的两个参与者案例;(ii)来自英国的涉及猛禽和松鸡保护的三个参与者案例;(iii)来自菲律宾的涉及鱼类和珊瑚保护的 n 个参与者案例。在每种情况下,都有理由相信传统的诉诸物质激励的机制设计解决方案可能不足,博弈论分析建议重新开始代理之间的进一步审议,并启动信任和信心建立措施。
博弈论可以而且应该在生物多样性保护情境中被用作规范工具:识别具有帕累托非有效的纳什均衡的情景可以采取建设性的行动,以实现(更接近)最佳的保护结果,无论是通过基于机制设计的政策解决方案还是其他方式。然而,越来越多的证据表明,正式的机制设计解决方案在某些情况下可能适得其反。在这种情况下,需要回到群体审议,并建立相互信任的关系。