In a symmetric game, TDT agents choose symmetric strategies. Without a source of randomness, this entails playing symmetrically as well.
I’m not sure why you’re talking about shared random input. If both agents get the same input, they can both be expected to treat it in the same way and make the same decision, regardless of the input’s source. Each agent needs an independent source of randomness in order to play the mixed equilibrium; if my strategy is to play C 30% of the time, I need to know whether this iteration is part of that 30%, which I can’t do deterministically because my opponent is simulating me.
Yeah, I think any use of correlated equilibrium here is wrong—that requires a shared random source. I think in this case we just get symmetric strategies, i.e., it reduces to superrationality, where they each just get their own private random source.
I’m not sure why you’re talking about shared random input.
Sorry if this was unclear. It was a reference to the correlated pair of random variables used in a correlated equilibrium. I was saying that even without such a correlated pair, you may presume the availability of independent random variables which would allow a Nash equilibrium—still better than symmetric play in this game.
In a symmetric game, TDT agents choose symmetric strategies. Without a source of randomness, this entails playing symmetrically as well.
I’m not sure why you’re talking about shared random input. If both agents get the same input, they can both be expected to treat it in the same way and make the same decision, regardless of the input’s source. Each agent needs an independent source of randomness in order to play the mixed equilibrium; if my strategy is to play C 30% of the time, I need to know whether this iteration is part of that 30%, which I can’t do deterministically because my opponent is simulating me.
Yeah, I think any use of correlated equilibrium here is wrong—that requires a shared random source. I think in this case we just get symmetric strategies, i.e., it reduces to superrationality, where they each just get their own private random source.
Sorry if this was unclear. It was a reference to the correlated pair of random variables used in a correlated equilibrium. I was saying that even without such a correlated pair, you may presume the availability of independent random variables which would allow a Nash equilibrium—still better than symmetric play in this game.