Pulford Briony D, Mangiarulo Marta, Colman Andrew M
School of Psychology and Vision Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Sci Rep. 2025 May 2;15(1):15365. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-00279-w.
When two people are motivated solely to coordinate their actions, but one is better informed than the other about how best to achieve this, confidence signalling can facilitate mutually rewarding choices, and the use of this so-called confidence heuristic has been confirmed in experiments using coordination games. To investigate whether confidence signalling can also be used deceptively, we investigated behaviour in strategic games in which the better-informed player can benefit selfishly by misrepresenting confidence signals deliberately. We manipulated the relative quality of information provided to members of 55 dyads who discussed, under incomplete and asymmetric information, a series of problems in which they had to decide which of two shapes was closest in size to a target shape. Monetary incentives were structured according to the Deadlock game. We found that players with superior information felt greater confidence and attempted on a substantial minority of trials to deceive the other player, mainly by withholding the correct answer at the start of the discussion. We conclude that confidence signalling, even without lying, is sometimes used to deceive.
当两个人仅仅是为了协调他们的行动而产生动机,但其中一人比另一人更清楚如何才能最好地实现这一点时,信心信号传递可以促进双方都能从中受益的选择,并且在使用协调博弈的实验中已经证实了这种所谓的信心启发式方法的运用。为了研究信心信号传递是否也会被用于欺骗,我们研究了在策略博弈中的行为,在这种博弈中,信息更充分的玩家可以通过故意歪曲信心信号来自私地获益。我们操纵了提供给55个二元组成员的信息的相对质量,这些二元组在信息不完整和不对称的情况下讨论了一系列问题,在这些问题中他们必须决定两个形状中哪一个在尺寸上最接近目标形状。金钱激励是按照僵局博弈来设定的。我们发现,信息更充分的玩家感觉更有信心,并且在相当一部分试验中试图欺骗另一名玩家,主要是在讨论开始时隐瞒正确答案。我们得出结论,即使不撒谎,信心信号传递有时也会被用于欺骗。