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Main Authors: Piedrahita, David Guzman, Yang, Yongjin, Sachan, Mrinmaya, Ramponi, Giorgia, Schölkopf, Bernhard, Jin, Zhijing
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.23276
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author Piedrahita, David Guzman
Yang, Yongjin
Sachan, Mrinmaya
Ramponi, Giorgia
Schölkopf, Bernhard
Jin, Zhijing
author_facet Piedrahita, David Guzman
Yang, Yongjin
Sachan, Mrinmaya
Ramponi, Giorgia
Schölkopf, Bernhard
Jin, Zhijing
contents As large language models (LLMs) are increasingly deployed as autonomous agents, understanding their cooperation and social mechanisms is becoming increasingly important. In particular, how LLMs balance self-interest and collective well-being is a critical challenge for ensuring alignment, robustness, and safe deployment. In this paper, we examine the challenge of costly sanctioning in multi-agent LLM systems, where an agent must decide whether to invest its own resources to incentivize cooperation or penalize defection. To study this, we adapt a public goods game with institutional choice from behavioral economics, allowing us to observe how different LLMs navigate social dilemmas over repeated interactions. Our analysis reveals four distinct behavioral patterns among models: some consistently establish and sustain high levels of cooperation, others fluctuate between engagement and disengagement, some gradually decline in cooperative behavior over time, and others rigidly follow fixed strategies regardless of outcomes. Surprisingly, we find that reasoning LLMs, such as the o1 series, struggle significantly with cooperation, whereas some traditional LLMs consistently achieve high levels of cooperation. These findings suggest that the current approach to improving LLMs, which focuses on enhancing their reasoning capabilities, does not necessarily lead to cooperation, providing valuable insights for deploying LLM agents in environments that require sustained collaboration. Our code is available at https://github.com/davidguzmanp/SanctSim
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2506_23276
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Corrupted by Reasoning: Reasoning Language Models Become Free-Riders in Public Goods Games
Piedrahita, David Guzman
Yang, Yongjin
Sachan, Mrinmaya
Ramponi, Giorgia
Schölkopf, Bernhard
Jin, Zhijing
Artificial Intelligence
Computation and Language
As large language models (LLMs) are increasingly deployed as autonomous agents, understanding their cooperation and social mechanisms is becoming increasingly important. In particular, how LLMs balance self-interest and collective well-being is a critical challenge for ensuring alignment, robustness, and safe deployment. In this paper, we examine the challenge of costly sanctioning in multi-agent LLM systems, where an agent must decide whether to invest its own resources to incentivize cooperation or penalize defection. To study this, we adapt a public goods game with institutional choice from behavioral economics, allowing us to observe how different LLMs navigate social dilemmas over repeated interactions. Our analysis reveals four distinct behavioral patterns among models: some consistently establish and sustain high levels of cooperation, others fluctuate between engagement and disengagement, some gradually decline in cooperative behavior over time, and others rigidly follow fixed strategies regardless of outcomes. Surprisingly, we find that reasoning LLMs, such as the o1 series, struggle significantly with cooperation, whereas some traditional LLMs consistently achieve high levels of cooperation. These findings suggest that the current approach to improving LLMs, which focuses on enhancing their reasoning capabilities, does not necessarily lead to cooperation, providing valuable insights for deploying LLM agents in environments that require sustained collaboration. Our code is available at https://github.com/davidguzmanp/SanctSim
title Corrupted by Reasoning: Reasoning Language Models Become Free-Riders in Public Goods Games
topic Artificial Intelligence
Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.23276