TY - GEN
T1 - Time-inconsistent planning
T2 - 15th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation, EC 2014
AU - Kleinberg, Jon
AU - Oren, Sigal
PY - 2014/1/1
Y1 - 2014/1/1
N2 - In many settings, people exhibit behavior that is inconsistent across time ' we allocate a block of time to get work done and then procrastinate, or put effort into a project and then later fail to complete it. An active line of research in behavioral economics and related fields has developed and analyzed models for this type of time-inconsistent behavior. Here we propose a graph-theoretic model of tasks and goals, in which dependencies among actions are represented by a directed graph, and a time-inconsistent agent constructs a path through this graph. We first show how instances of this path-finding problem on different input graphs can reconstruct a wide range of qualitative phenomena observed in the literature on time-inconsistency, including procrastination, abandonment of long-range tasks, and the benefits of reduced sets of choices. We then explore a set of analyses that quantify over the set of all graphs; among other results, we find that in any graph, there can be only polynomially many distinct forms of time-inconsistent behavior; and any graph in which a time-inconsistent agent incurs significantly more cost than an optimal agent must contain a large 'procrastination' structure as a minor. Finally, we use this graph-theoretic model to explore ways in which tasks can be designed to help motivate agents to reach designated goals.
AB - In many settings, people exhibit behavior that is inconsistent across time ' we allocate a block of time to get work done and then procrastinate, or put effort into a project and then later fail to complete it. An active line of research in behavioral economics and related fields has developed and analyzed models for this type of time-inconsistent behavior. Here we propose a graph-theoretic model of tasks and goals, in which dependencies among actions are represented by a directed graph, and a time-inconsistent agent constructs a path through this graph. We first show how instances of this path-finding problem on different input graphs can reconstruct a wide range of qualitative phenomena observed in the literature on time-inconsistency, including procrastination, abandonment of long-range tasks, and the benefits of reduced sets of choices. We then explore a set of analyses that quantify over the set of all graphs; among other results, we find that in any graph, there can be only polynomially many distinct forms of time-inconsistent behavior; and any graph in which a time-inconsistent agent incurs significantly more cost than an optimal agent must contain a large 'procrastination' structure as a minor. Finally, we use this graph-theoretic model to explore ways in which tasks can be designed to help motivate agents to reach designated goals.
KW - behavioral economics
KW - present bias
KW - time-inconsistency
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84903206231
U2 - 10.1145/2600057.2602890
DO - 10.1145/2600057.2602890
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84903206231
SN - 9781450325653
T3 - EC 2014 - Proceedings of the 15th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation
SP - 547
EP - 564
BT - EC 2014 - Proceedings of the 15th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
Y2 - 8 June 2014 through 12 June 2014
ER -