BJKS Podcast

33. Bryan Bruns: Applied sociology, 2x2 games, and how to transform tragedy into win-win

September 03, 2021 Benjamin James Kuper-Smith
BJKS Podcast
33. Bryan Bruns: Applied sociology, 2x2 games, and how to transform tragedy into win-win
Show Notes Chapter Markers

Bryan Bruns is an independent consultant sociologist, working mainly on water irrigation systems in southeast Asia. He also publishes academic papers about game theory. In this conversation, we talk about how he became a consultant sociologist, what that even means, how to learn foreign languages, his work on 2x2 games, how to transform a social dilemma into a win-win situation, and much more.

BJKS Podcast is a podcast about neuroscience, psychology, and anything vaguely related, hosted by Benjamin James Kuper-Smith. New episodes every Friday. You can find the podcast on all podcasting platforms (e.g., Spotify, Apple/Google Podcasts, etc.).

Timestamps
0:00:05: How Bryan became a consultant sociologist, working in southeast Asia on water management
0:21:31: How to learn foreign languages
0:31:35: But what does a consultant sociologist actually do? And what makes you good at it?
0:49:36: Why not be a "regular" academic (instead of doing applied work)?
0:54:32: Elinor Ostrom and the commons
1:09:09: 2x2 games and the Prisoner's Dilemma
1:16:34: Names for games
1:38:30: From tragedy to win-win
1:50:10: Asymmetric games
1:58:06: Implementing game theoretic ideas in the real world with real people
2:02:20: Reading recommendations for game theory

Podcast links

Bryan's links

Ben's links


References
Balliet, Parks & Joireman (2009). Social value orientation and cooperation in social dilemmas: A meta-analysis. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations.
Binmore (2007). Game Theory: A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press.
Bruns (2015). Names for games: locating 2×2 games. Games.
Bruns (2018). From Tragedy to Win-Win Transforming Social Dilemmas in Commons. Georgetown Law Center, Washington DC, USA.
Bruns & Meinzen-Dick (2000). Negotiating water rights.
Hardin (1958). The tragedy of the commons. Science.
Hare (2017). Survival of the friendliest: Homo sapiens evolved via selection for prosociality. Annual review of psychology.
Munroe (2015). Thing explainer: complicated stuff in simple words. Hachette UK.
Murphy, Ackermann & Handgraaf (2011). Measuring social value orientation. Judgment and Decision making.
Nowak & Highfield (2011). Supercooperators: Altruism, evolution, and why we need each other to succeed. Simon and Schuster.
Ostrom (1990). Governing the commons: The evolution of institutions for collective action. Cambridge University Press.
Ostrom, Gardner & Walker (1994). Rules, games, and common-pool resources. University of Michigan Press.
Rapoport, Guyer & Gordon (1976). The 2x2 game. University of Michigan Press.
Robinson & Goforth (2005). The topology of the 2x2 games: a new periodic table (Vol. 3). Psychology Press.
Tufte, E. (2001). The visual display of quantitative information.

"Mr condom": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechai_Viravaidya

How Bryan became a consultant sociologist, working in southeast Asia on water management
How to learn foreign languages
But what does a consultant sociologist actually do? And what makes you good at it?
Why not be a "regular" academic (instead of doing applied work)?
Elinor Ostrom and the commons
2*2 games and the Prisoner's Dilemma
Names for games
From tragedy to win-win
Asymmetric games
Implementing game theoretic ideas in the real world with real people
Reading recommendations for game theory