What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

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What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

Stephen Guerin-5
Nick,

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."
 
For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.
 
An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

-Stephen


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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

thompnickson2

I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy (as opposed to a Condition Altruism Strategy. 

 

My original impulse was not .. um … prosocial.  I was pissed by the extent to which the entire literature had gone down the Axelrod rat hole with its totally unnatural assumptions and annoyed at my colleagues for giving things cute names.  So, I thought, I can play this stupid game, too.  And,  indeed, I could.  And SURPRISE! it’s still a stupid game, even though I can play it. 

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

Nick,

 

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

 

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

 

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."

 

For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.

 

An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

 

-Stephen

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________

[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable


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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

Stephen Guerin-5
> I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy

Yes, I think of Conditional Association Strategy as its "genus". There's an unspecified bit in the "genome" on the conditional behavior in that name that needs to be more specific to make it a species which could be either cooperate or defect. In the table from the paper, For example, there's three strategies of the "conditional association strategies" genus. Arguably the name MOTH is a name for the genus not the particular species. Note how NasMoth (NastyMoth) has that bit specified in the negative direction. We'd like the "dual" in the positive direction.

A more particular name for the MOTH strategy might be something like a "HippieMoth" ethic where it seeks reciprocity in ooperative relationships and leaves when reciprocity is absent. Another name might be "Hippy-Dippy" which gives the sense of flightiness too. But I'm wondering if there's a better character analogue. It is a kind of golden rule for dynamic networks.

image.png

As we're writing some software and related whitepapers I want input/blessing as we consider tightening up the naming. Note how google's naming of PageRank was helpful to communicate their approach.

_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]
CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com
1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505
office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828
twitter: @simtable


On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 10:14 AM <[hidden email]> wrote:

I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy (as opposed to a Condition Altruism Strategy. 

 

My original impulse was not .. um … prosocial.  I was pissed by the extent to which the entire literature had gone down the Axelrod rat hole with its totally unnatural assumptions and annoyed at my colleagues for giving things cute names.  So, I thought, I can play this stupid game, too.  And,  indeed, I could.  And SURPRISE! it’s still a stupid game, even though I can play it. 

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

Nick,

 

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

 

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

 

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."

 

For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.

 

An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

 

-Stephen

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________

[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

- .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. .
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Zoom Fridays 9:30a-12p Mtn GMT-6  bit.ly/virtualfriam
un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

Stephen Guerin-5
And as I look at it more closely, Nasty Moth isn't actually "MOTH" in the meaning of "My Way or Highway" as it leaves when the other agent does "My way" which is defecting also.


_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]
CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com
1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505
office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828
twitter: @simtable


On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 11:17 AM Stephen Guerin <[hidden email]> wrote:
> I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy

Yes, I think of Conditional Association Strategy as its "genus". There's an unspecified bit in the "genome" on the conditional behavior in that name that needs to be more specific to make it a species which could be either cooperate or defect. In the table from the paper, For example, there's three strategies of the "conditional association strategies" genus. Arguably the name MOTH is a name for the genus not the particular species. Note how NasMoth (NastyMoth) has that bit specified in the negative direction. We'd like the "dual" in the positive direction.

A more particular name for the MOTH strategy might be something like a "HippieMoth" ethic where it seeks reciprocity in ooperative relationships and leaves when reciprocity is absent. Another name might be "Hippy-Dippy" which gives the sense of flightiness too. But I'm wondering if there's a better character analogue. It is a kind of golden rule for dynamic networks.

image.png

As we're writing some software and related whitepapers I want input/blessing as we consider tightening up the naming. Note how google's naming of PageRank was helpful to communicate their approach.

_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]
CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com
1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505
office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828
twitter: @simtable


On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 10:14 AM <[hidden email]> wrote:

I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy (as opposed to a Condition Altruism Strategy. 

 

My original impulse was not .. um … prosocial.  I was pissed by the extent to which the entire literature had gone down the Axelrod rat hole with its totally unnatural assumptions and annoyed at my colleagues for giving things cute names.  So, I thought, I can play this stupid game, too.  And,  indeed, I could.  And SURPRISE! it’s still a stupid game, even though I can play it. 

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

Nick,

 

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

 

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

 

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."

 

For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.

 

An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

 

-Stephen

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________

[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

- .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. .
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Zoom Fridays 9:30a-12p Mtn GMT-6  bit.ly/virtualfriam
un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by Stephen Guerin-5

NiceMoth?

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 12:17 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

> I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy

 

Yes, I think of Conditional Association Strategy as its "genus". There's an unspecified bit in the "genome" on the conditional behavior in that name that needs to be more specific to make it a species which could be either cooperate or defect. In the table from the paper, For example, there's three strategies of the "conditional association strategies" genus. Arguably the name MOTH is a name for the genus not the particular species. Note how NasMoth (NastyMoth) has that bit specified in the negative direction. We'd like the "dual" in the positive direction.

 

A more particular name for the MOTH strategy might be something like a "HippieMoth" ethic where it seeks reciprocity in ooperative relationships and leaves when reciprocity is absent. Another name might be "Hippy-Dippy" which gives the sense of flightiness too. But I'm wondering if there's a better character analogue. It is a kind of golden rule for dynamic networks.

 

 

As we're writing some software and related whitepapers I want input/blessing as we consider tightening up the naming. Note how google's naming of PageRank was helpful to communicate their approach.

 

_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

 

 

On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 10:14 AM <[hidden email]> wrote:

I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy (as opposed to a Condition Altruism Strategy. 

 

My original impulse was not .. um … prosocial.  I was pissed by the extent to which the entire literature had gone down the Axelrod rat hole with its totally unnatural assumptions and annoyed at my colleagues for giving things cute names.  So, I thought, I can play this stupid game, too.  And,  indeed, I could.  And SURPRISE! it’s still a stupid game, even though I can play it. 

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

Nick,

 

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

 

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

 

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."

 

For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.

 

An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

 

-Stephen

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________

[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

- .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. .
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Zoom Fridays 9:30a-12p Mtn GMT-6  bit.ly/virtualfriam
un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
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un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by Stephen Guerin-5

Yes.  You are correct.  That’s why the use of stupid names is so stupid.  We could have used abbreviations such as UnconAltConAss (Moth) and UnconDefConAss (NasMoth), ConAltUnconAss (Tit for tat), etc.  Mostly I think we should obey our nursery school teacher and “use our words”.  There was a kid at one of my kid’s nursery school who used this strategy very consistently.  He would always ask politely for the toy the other kid was playing with, BEFORE he hit him with a block.  Redundancy in scientific writing is not such a bad thing. 

 

What I would like to remind you is that this thing we created was a platform that could have been used to rip off half a dozen publishable “experiments.”  Nobody has ever exploited it for that purpose, which is sad.  We only got the one publication out of it.  We needed graduate students.

 

Why is this coming up now??

 

Nick

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 12:22 PM
To: Stephen Guerin <[hidden email]>
Cc: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

And as I look at it more closely, Nasty Moth isn't actually "MOTH" in the meaning of "My Way or Highway" as it leaves when the other agent does "My way" which is defecting also.

 


_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

 

 

On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 11:17 AM Stephen Guerin <[hidden email]> wrote:

> I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy

 

Yes, I think of Conditional Association Strategy as its "genus". There's an unspecified bit in the "genome" on the conditional behavior in that name that needs to be more specific to make it a species which could be either cooperate or defect. In the table from the paper, For example, there's three strategies of the "conditional association strategies" genus. Arguably the name MOTH is a name for the genus not the particular species. Note how NasMoth (NastyMoth) has that bit specified in the negative direction. We'd like the "dual" in the positive direction.

 

A more particular name for the MOTH strategy might be something like a "HippieMoth" ethic where it seeks reciprocity in ooperative relationships and leaves when reciprocity is absent. Another name might be "Hippy-Dippy" which gives the sense of flightiness too. But I'm wondering if there's a better character analogue. It is a kind of golden rule for dynamic networks.

 

 

As we're writing some software and related whitepapers I want input/blessing as we consider tightening up the naming. Note how google's naming of PageRank was helpful to communicate their approach.

 

_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

 

 

On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 10:14 AM <[hidden email]> wrote:

I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy (as opposed to a Condition Altruism Strategy. 

 

My original impulse was not .. um … prosocial.  I was pissed by the extent to which the entire literature had gone down the Axelrod rat hole with its totally unnatural assumptions and annoyed at my colleagues for giving things cute names.  So, I thought, I can play this stupid game, too.  And,  indeed, I could.  And SURPRISE! it’s still a stupid game, even though I can play it. 

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

Nick,

 

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

 

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

 

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."

 

For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.

 

An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

 

-Stephen

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________

[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

- .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. .
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Zoom Fridays 9:30a-12p Mtn GMT-6  bit.ly/virtualfriam
un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
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- .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. .
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Zoom Fridays 9:30a-12p Mtn GMT-6  bit.ly/virtualfriam
un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

Stephen Guerin-5
> Why is this coming up now??
  • Some sense of urgency as I want to get your input and approval on naming while your mental faculties are still at their height  ;-p
  • you mentioned having some regret on the name two weeks ago at FRIAM and I thought I heard you mention an alternative
  • We are writing code and need to name an algorithm as we discuss it I don't think MOTH is the right name. It's less of an academic exercise on naming and more of the practical need to efficiently communicate among developers. Especially so when they need to debug behavior it helps to have a good name of what's supposed to be going on.
  • we've been asked to write a paper on our approach to collective intelligence and collective action in "ungoverned spaces" and "undergoverned spaces". Think governance more broadly than government as in wikipedia description. I'm thinking a bit about how MOTH is an example design mechanism. While the MOTH paper was introduced in the context of the "Darwinian Problem of Altruism", that may have been a forced worldview for the application of the heuristic/algorithm. I think MOTH equally fits in an alternative world view of coopertive effects in Collective Action where "selfless acts" are not a "problem" that needs explaining.
On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 12:12 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Yes.  You are correct.  That’s why the use of stupid names is so stupid.  We could have used abbreviations such as UnconAltConAss (Moth) and UnconDefConAss (NasMoth), ConAltUnconAss (Tit for tat), etc.  Mostly I think we should obey our nursery school teacher and “use our words”.  There was a kid at one of my kid’s nursery school who used this strategy very consistently.  He would always ask politely for the toy the other kid was playing with, BEFORE he hit him with a block.  Redundancy in scientific writing is not such a bad thing. 

 

What I would like to remind you is that this thing we created was a platform that could have been used to rip off half a dozen publishable “experiments.”  Nobody has ever exploited it for that purpose, which is sad.  We only got the one publication out of it.  We needed graduate students.

 

Why is this coming up now??

 

Nick

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 12:22 PM
To: Stephen Guerin <[hidden email]>
Cc: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

And as I look at it more closely, Nasty Moth isn't actually "MOTH" in the meaning of "My Way or Highway" as it leaves when the other agent does "My way" which is defecting also.

 


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On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 11:17 AM Stephen Guerin <[hidden email]> wrote:

> I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy

 

Yes, I think of Conditional Association Strategy as its "genus". There's an unspecified bit in the "genome" on the conditional behavior in that name that needs to be more specific to make it a species which could be either cooperate or defect. In the table from the paper, For example, there's three strategies of the "conditional association strategies" genus. Arguably the name MOTH is a name for the genus not the particular species. Note how NasMoth (NastyMoth) has that bit specified in the negative direction. We'd like the "dual" in the positive direction.

 

A more particular name for the MOTH strategy might be something like a "HippieMoth" ethic where it seeks reciprocity in ooperative relationships and leaves when reciprocity is absent. Another name might be "Hippy-Dippy" which gives the sense of flightiness too. But I'm wondering if there's a better character analogue. It is a kind of golden rule for dynamic networks.

 

 

As we're writing some software and related whitepapers I want input/blessing as we consider tightening up the naming. Note how google's naming of PageRank was helpful to communicate their approach.

 

_______________________________________________________________________
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office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

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On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 10:14 AM <[hidden email]> wrote:

I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy (as opposed to a Condition Altruism Strategy. 

 

My original impulse was not .. um … prosocial.  I was pissed by the extent to which the entire literature had gone down the Axelrod rat hole with its totally unnatural assumptions and annoyed at my colleagues for giving things cute names.  So, I thought, I can play this stupid game, too.  And,  indeed, I could.  And SURPRISE! it’s still a stupid game, even though I can play it. 

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

Nick,

 

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

 

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

 

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."

 

For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.

 

An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

 

-Stephen

 

 

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twitter: @simtable

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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

thompnickson2

It’s funny that you should mention this  right now, because you WEREN’T at FRIAM last week, and we spent quite a time discussing whether physicists could honestly disclaim the terms they use and the metaphors those terms imply.  Eric and I were arguing that they can’t and that those metaphors not only play a role in granting them fame and fortune, but that they often play a role in the development of their thought, which, if not recognized, can be dangerous. 

 

In the end, it turned out that we had not been the first to come up with a conditional association strategy.  A very bright woman by the name of Athena Aptikis (?) invented it about the same time, or a little ahead of us.  And others as well.  If you want find those references, look at some of the responses to our article on JSSS, and then work your way backwards. 

 

People have often argued that cooperation takes some very special circumstances to evolve if competition is your base line.  But the reverse is also true; if your baseline is cooperation then competition is hard to get to.  Think about all the structures of enforcement that have to be assured before we can have a level playing field.   Who are the guarantors of fairness in the genome?

 

Nick

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 5:03 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

> Why is this coming up now??

  • Some sense of urgency as I want to get your input and approval on naming while your mental faculties are still at their height  ;-p
  • you mentioned having some regret on the name two weeks ago at FRIAM and I thought I heard you mention an alternative
  • We are writing code and need to name an algorithm as we discuss it I don't think MOTH is the right name. It's less of an academic exercise on naming and more of the practical need to efficiently communicate among developers. Especially so when they need to debug behavior it helps to have a good name of what's supposed to be going on.
  • we've been asked to write a paper on our approach to collective intelligence and collective action in "ungoverned spaces" and "undergoverned spaces". Think governance more broadly than government as in wikipedia description. I'm thinking a bit about how MOTH is an example design mechanism. While the MOTH paper was introduced in the context of the "Darwinian Problem of Altruism", that may have been a forced worldview for the application of the heuristic/algorithm. I think MOTH equally fits in an alternative world view of coopertive effects in Collective Action where "selfless acts" are not a "problem" that needs explaining.

On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 12:12 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Yes.  You are correct.  That’s why the use of stupid names is so stupid.  We could have used abbreviations such as UnconAltConAss (Moth) and UnconDefConAss (NasMoth), ConAltUnconAss (Tit for tat), etc.  Mostly I think we should obey our nursery school teacher and “use our words”.  There was a kid at one of my kid’s nursery school who used this strategy very consistently.  He would always ask politely for the toy the other kid was playing with, BEFORE he hit him with a block.  Redundancy in scientific writing is not such a bad thing. 

 

What I would like to remind you is that this thing we created was a platform that could have been used to rip off half a dozen publishable “experiments.”  Nobody has ever exploited it for that purpose, which is sad.  We only got the one publication out of it.  We needed graduate students.

 

Why is this coming up now??

 

Nick

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 12:22 PM
To: Stephen Guerin <[hidden email]>
Cc: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

And as I look at it more closely, Nasty Moth isn't actually "MOTH" in the meaning of "My Way or Highway" as it leaves when the other agent does "My way" which is defecting also.

 


_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

 

 

On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 11:17 AM Stephen Guerin <[hidden email]> wrote:

> I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy

 

Yes, I think of Conditional Association Strategy as its "genus". There's an unspecified bit in the "genome" on the conditional behavior in that name that needs to be more specific to make it a species which could be either cooperate or defect. In the table from the paper, For example, there's three strategies of the "conditional association strategies" genus. Arguably the name MOTH is a name for the genus not the particular species. Note how NasMoth (NastyMoth) has that bit specified in the negative direction. We'd like the "dual" in the positive direction.

 

A more particular name for the MOTH strategy might be something like a "HippieMoth" ethic where it seeks reciprocity in ooperative relationships and leaves when reciprocity is absent. Another name might be "Hippy-Dippy" which gives the sense of flightiness too. But I'm wondering if there's a better character analogue. It is a kind of golden rule for dynamic networks.

 

 

As we're writing some software and related whitepapers I want input/blessing as we consider tightening up the naming. Note how google's naming of PageRank was helpful to communicate their approach.

 

_______________________________________________________________________
[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

 

 

On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 10:14 AM <[hidden email]> wrote:

I think the proper name is Conditional Association Strategy (as opposed to a Condition Altruism Strategy. 

 

My original impulse was not .. um … prosocial.  I was pissed by the extent to which the entire literature had gone down the Axelrod rat hole with its totally unnatural assumptions and annoyed at my colleagues for giving things cute names.  So, I thought, I can play this stupid game, too.  And,  indeed, I could.  And SURPRISE! it’s still a stupid game, even though I can play it. 

 

Nick

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Sunday, November 1, 2020 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: [FRIAM] What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

 

Nick,

 

On a recent FRIAM you expressed mild regret on your naming of MOTH (My Way or the Highway)
  http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/9/2/4.html

 

Given a chance to rename it what were some of the options over the years?  Does the list have better suggestions?

 

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this CS aphorism attests.
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."

 

For the list, MOTH is a winning strategy in an expanded Iterated Prisoners Dilemma game where agents can leave a relationship during a round in the tournament and be randomly assigned another unassociated agent. They always cooperate and then leave if defected against. MOTH agents unconditionally cooperate and conditionally associate.

 

An example of an expanded TIT-FOR-TAT strategy in this game might be to conditionally cooperate and unconditionally associate. ie cooperate until defected against then switch to always defect and  stay in the association. (think of a bad marriage without divorce). 

 

We continue to think MOTH remains an important simple heuristic for link formation/maintenance in trust networks / decentralized systems. And naming is important.

 

-Stephen

 

 

_______________________________________________________________________

[hidden email]

CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com

1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505

office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828

twitter: @simtable

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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

Barry MacKichan
In reply to this post by Stephen Guerin-5

When I interviewed at Microsoft, one of my interviewers was Charles Simonyi, the originator of what is called “Hungarian”. It is a small set of rules and a bunch of prefixes used to encode type information in variable and function names. For example, ‘lpszName’ is the name of a long pointer to a zero-terminated string. It doesn’t work well when there are a lot of user-defined types, such as C++ classes. I was unaware of this before the interview.

The interview included implementing a function on a blackboard. At some point I muttered that the hardest part of programming is coming up with names. I think I became a shoo-in at that point. (I still do believe that about names).

—Barry

On 1 Nov 2020, at 11:59, Stephen Guerin wrote:

Naming may seem trivial and arbitrary but it is important as this [CS aphorism attests](<https://martinfowler.com/bliki/TwoHardThings.html>).
      "There are 2 hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-1 errors."


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Re: What's in a name? MOTH to a Flame

Russell Standish-2
On Mon, Nov 02, 2020 at 11:24:39AM -0500, Barry MacKichan wrote:
> When I interviewed at Microsoft, one of my interviewers was Charles Simonyi,
> the originator of what is called “Hungarian”. It is a small set of rules and a
> bunch of prefixes used to encode type information in variable and function
> names. For example, ‘lpszName’ is the name of a long pointer to a
> zero-terminated string. It doesn’t work well when there are a lot of
> user-defined types, such as C++ classes.

It doesn't work well at any point. Basically, the name could be lying,
for example if the implementation has been changed, but the variable
name not. Therefore, if you need to know the type of something, then
you need to look it up (modern IDEs make this pretty easy), not assume
that the variable name tells you anything about it's type. Also, there
are some many variants of "Hungarian", it gets pretty silly after a
while. Years of reading code has taught me to filter out hungarian
prefixes as meaningless line noise.



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