45 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
45 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
type: source
|
|
title: "Futarchy in decentralized science: empirical and simulation evidence for outcome-based conditional markets in DeSci DAOs"
|
|
author: "Frontiers in Blockchain (academic paper)"
|
|
url: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/blockchain/articles/10.3389/fbloc.2025.1650188/full
|
|
date: 2025-00-00
|
|
domain: internet-finance
|
|
secondary_domains: [collective-intelligence, ai-alignment]
|
|
format: paper
|
|
status: unprocessed
|
|
priority: high
|
|
tags: [futarchy, DeSci, DAOs, empirical-evidence, VitaDAO, simulation, governance-cadence]
|
|
flagged_for_theseus: ["DeSci governance patterns relevant to AI alignment coordination mechanisms"]
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
## Content
|
|
|
|
Academic paper examining futarchy adoption in DeSci (Decentralized Science) DAOs.
|
|
|
|
**Methodology:**
|
|
- Empirical analysis of governance data from 13 DeSci DAOs (AthenaDAO, BiohackerDAO, CerebrumDAO, CryoDAO, GenomesDAO, HairDAO, HippocratDAO, MoonDAO, PsyDAO, VitaDAO, others)
|
|
- Retrospective simulation using VitaDAO proposals to compare futarchy-preferred outcomes vs actual voting outcomes
|
|
- Uses KPI-conditional futarchy (forecasting proposal-specific key performance indicators), NOT asset-price futarchy — because early-stage science DAOs are thinly traded and tightly coupled to crypto market sentiment
|
|
|
|
**Key Findings:**
|
|
1. **Governance cadence**: Most DeSci DAOs operate below 1 proposal/month — too infrequent for continuous futarchy. Only some DAOs exhibit governance tempo compatible with continuous outcome-based decision processes.
|
|
2. **VitaDAO simulation**: Conventional token-weighted voting reached the SAME choices as futarchy would have favored (up to April 2025). This is a critical finding — in environments with low information asymmetry, futarchy adds no value over voting.
|
|
3. **KPI vs asset-price futarchy**: Paper argues KPI-conditional markets are more appropriate than asset-price futarchy for contexts where token price is a noisy proxy for organizational success.
|
|
|
|
**Theoretical Framing:**
|
|
- Futarchy's "foundational premises regarding informational efficiency of speculative markets, incentive alignment under risk, and objectivity of welfare metrics remain open to contestation"
|
|
- When "institutional preconditions are met, conditional prediction markets within a futarchic framework can serve not just as informational supplements, but as primary decision-making substrates"
|
|
|
|
## Agent Notes
|
|
**Why this matters:** The VitaDAO finding — voting = futarchy outcomes — is potentially devastating for the "markets beat votes" thesis if generalizable. But the scope matters: DeSci DAOs have highly aligned, expert communities where information asymmetry is LOW. In contexts with high information asymmetry (capital allocation among strangers), futarchy should add more value.
|
|
**What surprised me:** The KPI-conditional vs asset-price futarchy distinction. Our KB treats futarchy as synonymous with coin-price objective functions ([[coin price is the fairest objective function for asset futarchy]]), but this paper argues KPI-conditional markets are MORE appropriate for many contexts. This challenges our scope.
|
|
**What I expected but didn't find:** Cases where futarchy clearly outperformed voting. The null result (same outcomes) is interesting but doesn't prove futarchy is BETTER, only that it's not worse in aligned communities.
|
|
**KB connections:** Directly relevant to [[MetaDAOs futarchy implementation shows limited trading volume in uncontested decisions]] — the governance cadence finding confirms that low-frequency governance reduces futarchy's value. Also challenges [[coin price is the fairest objective function for asset futarchy]] by presenting KPI-conditional alternatives.
|
|
**Extraction hints:** Key claim candidate: "Futarchy's information-aggregation advantage scales with the information asymmetry between participants — in aligned expert communities, it converges to the same outcomes as voting." This is a scoping claim that preserves the markets-beat-votes thesis while defining its boundary conditions.
|
|
**Context:** This is a peer-reviewed academic paper, not crypto media. Higher epistemic credibility. Published in Frontiers in Blockchain, a legitimate academic journal. The 13-DAO dataset is the largest empirical study of DeSci governance patterns.
|
|
|
|
## Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)
|
|
PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[speculative markets aggregate information through incentive and selection effects not wisdom of crowds]]
|
|
WHY ARCHIVED: Peer-reviewed evidence that futarchy converges with voting in low-information-asymmetry environments — defines the boundary condition where markets DON'T beat votes
|
|
EXTRACTION HINT: Focus on the boundary condition claim — when does futarchy add value vs when does it converge with voting? The information asymmetry dimension is the key variable
|