In this regime, success depends on the effective translation of informational advantage into collective action. The informed agent must relay, interpret, or signal state accurately, while the less-informed agent must rely on trust and responsiveness rather than direct observation. Failure emerges when informational asymmetry creates bottlenecks, delays, or silent dependency—turning guidance into unintended control even in the absence of conflicting intent.


Categories of Guided Coordination

Fully Cooperative × Perfect Information × Asymmetric Access

Fixed structure (held constant):

The asymmetry is informational, not authoritative.


1. Advisory Coordination

(Non-binding commitment)

What it is
One agent provides guidance; the other remains fully free to accept, ignore, or reinterpret it.
Information flows, but nothing constrains future action.

How it works

Why this is stable
The task allows judgment at execution time; guidance improves performance but is not mandatory.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“Here’s what I see — do with it what you think is best.”


2. Lead-Anchor Coordination

(Unilateral binding)

What it is
The better-informed agent commits to a guidance stream or timing, anchoring coordination around their signals.

How it works

Why this is stable
The task benefits from a reliable informational anchor rather than mutual deliberation.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“I’ll call it — you move on my signal.”


3. Delegated Reliance

(Bilateral binding)

What it is
Both agents mutually commit: one to provide guidance, the other to follow it within scope.

How it works

Why this is stable
Mutual constraint converts informational asymmetry into reliable execution.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“I see — you act — and we’re both locked into that division.”


4. Instrumented Coordination

(Externally enforced binding)

What it is
Guidance is embedded in a system that enforces compliance automatically.

How it works

Why this is stable
Coordination no longer depends on trust, interpretation, or judgment.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“The system sees — and you move accordingly.”


Structural takeaway (Guided Coordination)

Guided Coordination is not about authority — it is about epistemic dependence.

Commitment expressionWhat secures coordination
Advisory CoordinationTrust and discretion
Lead-Anchor CoordinationPredictable guidance
Delegated RelianceMutual lock-in
Instrumented CoordinationEnforced information flow