Sanabria, F. & Thrailkill, E. (2009).
Pigeons (Columba livia) approach Nash equilibrium in experimental
matching pennies competitions.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 91, 169-183.
The game of Matching Pennies (MP), a simplified version of the more popular Rock, Papers, Scissors,
schematically represents competitions between organisms with incentives to predict each others
behavior. Optimal performance in iterated MP competitions involves the production of random choice
patterns and the detection of nonrandomness in the opponents choices. The purpose of this study was
to replicate systematic deviations from optimal choice observed in humans when playing MP, and to
establish whether suboptimal performance was better described by a modified linear learning model or
by a more cognitively sophisticated reinforcement-tracking model. Two pairs of pigeons played iterated
MP competitions; payoffs for successful choices (e.g., Rock vs. Scissors) varied within experimental
sessions and across experimental conditions, and were signaled by visual stimuli. Pigeons behavior
adjusted to payoff matrices; divergences from optimal play were analogous to those usually
demonstrated by humans, except for the tendency of pigeons to persist on prior choices. Suboptimal
play was well characterized by a linear learning model of the kind widely used to describe human
performance. This linear learning model may thus serve as default account of competitive performance
against which the imputation of cognitively sophisticated processes can be evaluated.
Key words: competition, mixed-strategy equilibrium, behavioral economics, model, key peck,
pigeons