66 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
66 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: source
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title: "META-036 Implications for Mechanism B: First Experimental Evidence on Futarchy Information Aggregation"
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author: "Rio (research synthesis — not a primary source)"
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url: https://www.metadao.fi/projects/metadao/proposal/Dt6QxTtaPz87oEK4m95ztP36wZCXA9LGLrJf1sDYAwxi
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date: 2026-03-21
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domain: internet-finance
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secondary_domains: [mechanisms, collective-intelligence]
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format: research-note
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status: unprocessed
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priority: high
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tags: [metadao, robin-hanson, futarchy, mechanism-b, information-aggregation, academic-research, gmu]
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---
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## Content
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Note: The primary META-036 archive is at `inbox/queue/2026-03-21-metadao-meta036-hanson-futarchy-research.md`. This file contains the research synthesis of its implications for the KB's Mechanism B claims, developed in the 2026-03-23 session.
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**The proposal:** $80,007 USDC to fund 6-month academic research at George Mason University. Led by Robin Hanson (futarchy inventor) + Dr. Daniel Houser (co-investigator). 500 student participants ($50 each) in controlled experiments. IRB-reviewed. Budget: Hanson summer salary ~$30K, GRA ~$19K, participant payments $25K, Houser co-PI ~$6K.
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**Decision market status (as of March 21, 2026):** 50% likelihood, $42.16K volume, ~2 days remaining. Outcome as of March 23: unknown (unresolved at time of archive).
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**The core epistemological significance:**
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The proposal aims to produce "first rigorous experimental evidence on information-aggregation efficiency of futarchy governance." This admission is analytically important because it confirms that:
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1. **Mechanism B is considered empirically open by futarchy's inventor.** Hanson is designing experiments to test whether futarchy markets actually produce better information aggregation — if this were already established, the experiments would be unnecessary. The theoretical argument for Mechanism B (financial stakes → information acquisition and revelation → better decisions) is logically sound but lacks controlled experimental validation.
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2. **Controlled experiments will test Mechanism A more directly than Mechanism B.** The study design (500 students, controlled experiments) can test whether incentives improve forecasting calibration under controlled conditions — that's primarily Mechanism A (calibration selection). Replicating Mechanism B (the natural ecology of private information flowing to prices through real financial stakes) requires a real-money market context, not controlled experiments. The study is a valuable first step but won't close the Mechanism B evidence gap.
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3. **The 50% governance likelihood reveals a specific market belief:** MetaDAO participants are evenly split on whether funding academic futarchy validation benefits the META token price. This could reflect:
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- (a) Skepticism about whether academic validation translates to ecosystem growth
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- (b) Indifference to academic legitimacy among the participant base (they already believe in futarchy)
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- (c) Concerns about $80K cost relative to expected benefit
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The even split is NOT evidence against futarchy working — it's evidence that the community is calibrated about the marginal value of academic validation.
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**Implication for the KB's claim restatement:**
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Session 9 resolved the Mellers challenge by identifying two separable mechanisms. The META-036 proposal suggests the following update to the beliefs framework:
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- Mechanism A (calibration selection) → replicable by calibrated polls → well-studied academically
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- Mechanism B (information acquisition and strategic revelation) → requires real-money markets → no rigorous experimental validation exists
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The META-036 study may produce the first empirical data on Mechanism A in futarchy-specific contexts. A follow-up study with real-money markets would be needed to test Mechanism B. This gap is now documented in the academic literature's research agenda.
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## Agent Notes
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**Why this matters:** META-036 is the first case of MetaDAO using futarchy governance to fund futarchy research — a recursive structure with interesting epistemic properties. If the proposal passes, the market has revealed that it believes academic validation increases ecosystem value. If it fails, the market says academic validation doesn't matter. Either outcome is informative about the MetaDAO community's theory of legitimacy.
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**What surprised me:** The research budget is entirely realistic for academic economics — $80K is a standard small-grant scale for experimental economics at a major research university. Hanson is clearly treating this as serious academic work, not an advisory arrangement.
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**What I expected but didn't find:** Any claim in the existing KB that acknowledges Mechanism B as empirically unvalidated. All claims treat skin-in-the-game as established mechanism. META-036 creates a KB gap: we claim Mechanism B is the operative grounding for futarchy's epistemic advantage, but the operative claim is not yet experimentally confirmed.
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**KB connections:**
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- [[speculative markets aggregate information through incentive and selection effects not wisdom of crowds]] — this claim asserts the mechanism; META-036 signals that the mechanism's experimental validation is in progress
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- Session 9 claim candidate: "Skin-in-the-game markets have two separable epistemic mechanisms with different replaceability" — the META-036 study design will test Mechanism A, not B; this gap should be in the claim's scope
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- [[MetaDAO empirical results show smaller participants gaining influence through futarchy]] — the META-036 vote itself is evidence: a small research proposal competing for treasury funds via conditional markets
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**Follow-up watch:**
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- META-036 outcome (resolves ~March 23, 2026 — today): Did the market pass or fail? If pass: community values academic legitimacy. If fail: community prioritizes direct ecosystem spending.
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- Study results (anticipated ~late 2026): Will provide first experimental data on futarchy information aggregation efficiency
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## Curator Notes
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PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[speculative markets aggregate information through incentive and selection effects not wisdom of crowds]]
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WHY ARCHIVED: Research synthesis note identifying that META-036 creates a documented gap in the KB's Mechanism B evidence — the operative theoretical claim for Belief #1 has no experimental validation, and the first study to provide it is now funded (conditional on vote outcome)
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EXTRACTION HINT: The core extraction is NOT a claim but a belief update: the Session 9 claim candidate ("two separable epistemic mechanisms") should include a scope note that Mechanism B is theoretically grounded but experimentally unvalidated. META-036 is the first attempt to close this gap.
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