Search results for "jel:C7"

showing 10 items of 32 documents

BARGAINING WITH COMMITMENT UNDER AN UNCERTAIN DEADLINE

2006

We consider an infinite horizon bargaining game in which a deadline can arise with positive probability and where players possess an endogenous commitment device. We show that for any truncation of the game, the equilibrium agreement can only take place if the deadline arises within this finite horizon. Since the deadline is an uncertain event, the equilibrium exhibits agreements which are delayed with positive probability.

Commitment deviceComputer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryGeneral Computer ScienceTruncationFinite horizonC78 [Bargaining endogenous commitment delays uncertain deadline JEL Classification]jel:M2MicroeconomicsEconomicsjel:C0Infinite horizonStatistics Probability and UncertaintyBusiness and International Managementjel:D5jel:B4Mathematical economicsComputer Science::Operating Systemsjel:C6jel:D7Positive probabilityComputer Science::Databasesjel:C7Event (probability theory)International Game Theory Review
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Codification schemes and finite automata

2000

This paper is a note on how Information Theory and Codification Theory are helpful in the computational design both of communication protocols and strategy sets in the framework of finitely repeated games played by boundedly rational agents. More precisely, we show the usefulness of both theories to improve the existing automata bounds of Neyman¿s (1998) work on finitely repeated games played by finite automata.

Complexity codification repeated games finite automataTheoretical computer scienceFinite-state machineSociology and Political Sciencejel:C72jel:C73ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGGeneral Social SciencesRational agentInformation theoryAutomatonRepeated gameAutomata theoryQuantum finite automataStatistics Probability and UncertaintyCommunications protocolGeneral PsychologyMathematicsMathematical Social Sciences
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On the Coincidence of the Feedback Nash and Stackelberg Equilibria in Economic Applications of Differential Games

2002

In this paper the scope of the applicability of the Stackelberg equilibrium concept in differential games is investigated. Firstly, conditions for obtaining the coincidence between the Stackelberg and Nash equilibria are defined in terms of the instantaneous pay-off function and the state equation of the game. Secondly, it is showed that for a class of differential games with state-interdependence both equilibria are identical independently of the player being the leader of the game. A survey of different economic models shows that this coincidence is going to occur for a good number of economic applications of differential games. This result appears because of the continuous-time setting i…

Computer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryCorrelated equilibriumMathematical optimizationjel:D62Differential Games; Stationary Feedback Nash Equilibrium; Stationary Feedback Stackelberg Equilibrium; Coincidence.ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGjel:C73Trembling hand perfect equilibriumjel:H41Differential games stationary feedback Nash equilibrium stationary feedback Stackelberg equilibrium.symbols.namesakeEquilibrium selectionNash equilibriumBest responsejel:Q20jel:Q30Repeated gameEconomicsStackelberg competitionsymbolsEpsilon-equilibriumMathematical economicsSSRN Electronic Journal
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Pragmatic languages with universal grammars

2012

Abstract This paper constructs the equilibrium for a specific code that can be seen as a “universal grammar” in a class of common interest Sender–Receiver games where players communicate through a noisy channel. We propose a Senderʼs signaling strategy which does not depend on either the game payoffs or the initial probability distribution. The Receiverʼs strategy partitions the set of possible sequences into subsets, with a single action assignment to each of them. The Senderʼs signaling strategy is a Nash equilibrium, i.e. when the Receiver responds best to the Senderʼs strategy, the Sender has no incentive to deviate. An example shows that a tie-breaking decoding is crucial for the block…

Computer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryEconomics and EconometricsTheoretical computer sciencejel:C61jel:D82Symmetric gamejel:C73TheoryofComputation_GENERALgrammar pragmatic language prototypes separating equilibriasymbols.namesakeNash equilibriumsymbolsCode (cryptography)Probability distributionCommunication sourceSignaling gameSet (psychology)FinanceDecoding methodsComputer Science::Information TheoryMathematicsGames and Economic Behavior
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Strategic sharing of a costly network

2012

We study minimum cost spanning tree problems for a set of users connected to a source. Prim’s algorithm provides a way of finding the minimum cost tree mm. This has led to several definitions in the literature, regarding how to distribute the cost. These rules propose different cost allocations, which can be understood as compensations and/or payments between players, with respect to the status quo point: each user pays for the connection she uses to be linked to the source. In this paper we analyze the rationale behind a distribution of the minimum cost by defining an a priori transfer structure. Our first result states the existence of a transfer structure such that no user is willing to …

Economics and EconometricsMathematical optimizationjel:D630211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyOutcome (game theory)Subgame perfect equilibriumSet (abstract data type)Distributed minimum spanning treeSubgame perfect equilibrium0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsMinimum cost spanning treeUser paysjel:C71jel:D70Cost allocationFundamentos del Análisis Económico021103 operations researchApplied Mathematics05 social sciencesCost allocationCore (game theory)Tree (data structure)CoreMinimum cost spanning tree; cost allocation; subgame perfect equilibriumTransfer structureJournal of Mathematical Economics
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Multiproduct trading with a common agent under complete information: Existence and characterization of Nash equilibrium

2014

This paper focuses on oligopolistic markets in which indivisible goods are sold by multiproduct firms to a continuum of homogeneous buyers, with measure normalized to one, who have preferences over bundles of products. Our analysis contributes to the literature on private, delegated agency games with complete information, extending the insights by Chiesa and Denicolò (2009) to multiproduct markets with indivisibilities and where the agent's preferences need not be monotone. By analyzing a kind of extended contract schedules -mixed bundling prices- that discriminate on exclusivity, the paper shows that efficient equilibria always exist in such settings. There may also exist inefficient equil…

Economics and EconometricsSequential equilibriumjel:D4105 social sciencesjel:C72Trembling hand perfect equilibriumSymmetric equilibrium050301 educationjel:D21jel:D43Multiproduct Price Competition Delegated Agency Games Mixed Bundling Prices Subgame Perfect Nash Equilibrium Strong EquilibriumSubgame perfect equilibriumMicroeconomicssymbols.namesakeSubgameNash equilibriumEquilibrium selection0502 economics and businessjel:L13symbolsEconomicsEpsilon-equilibrium0503 educationMathematical economics050205 econometrics
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Dynamic Models of International Environmental Agreements: A Differential Game Approach

2012

This article provides a survey of dynamic models of international environmental agreements (IEAs). The focus is on environmental problems that are caused by a stock pollutant as are the cases of the acid rain and climate change. For this reason, the survey only reviews the literature that utilizes dynamic state-space games to analyze the formation of international agreements to control pollution. The survey considers both the cooperative approach and the noncooperative approach. In the case of the latter, the survey distinguishes between the models that assume binding agreements and those that assume the contrary. An evaluation of the state of the art is presented in the conclusions along w…

Economics and Econometricsjel:D62Control (management)jel:C73Climate changejel:H41Management Monitoring Policy and LawPublic goodEnvironmental economicsMicroeconomicsjel:Q50Dynamic modelsAccountingDifferential gameEconomicsFinanceExternalityExternalities; public goods; pollution; international environmental agreements; state-space dynamic games; differential games; cooperative and noncooperative games; trigger strategies
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Nash codes for noisy channels

2012

This paper studies the stability of communication protocols that deal with transmission errors. We consider a coordination game between an informed sender and an uninformed decision maker, the receiver, who communicate over a noisy channel. The sender's strategy, called a code, maps states of nature to signals. The receiver's best response is to decode the received channel output as the state with highest expected receiver payoff. Given this decoding, an equilibrium or "Nash code" results if the sender encodes every state as prescribed. We show two theorems that give sufficient conditions for Nash codes. First, a receiver-optimal code defines a Nash code. A second, more surprising observati…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryTheoretical computer scienceComputer scienceInformation Theory (cs.IT)Computer Science - Information TheoryStochastic gamejel:C72jel:D82Stability (learning theory)Data_CODINGANDINFORMATIONTHEORYManagement Science and Operations Researchsender-receiver game communication noisy channel91A28Computer Science ApplicationsComputer Science - Computer Science and Game TheoryBest responseCode (cryptography)Coordination gameQA MathematicsDecoding methodsCommunication channelComputer Science and Game Theory (cs.GT)Computer Science::Information Theory
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THE SHAPLEY-SOLIDARITY VALUE FOR GAMES WITH A COALITION STRUCTURE

2013

A value for games with a coalition structure is introduced, where the rules guiding cooperation among the members of the same coalition are different from the interaction rules among coalitions. In particular, players inside a coalition exhibit a greater degree of solidarity than they are willing to use with players outside their coalition. The Shapley value is therefore used to compute the aggregate payoffs for the coalitions, and the solidarity value to obtain the payoffs for the players inside each coalition.

General Computer ScienceCoalitional value Shapley value Owen value Solidarity value C71ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGMathematicsofComputing_GENERALStructure (category theory)TheoryofComputation_GENERALComputingMethodologies_ARTIFICIALINTELLIGENCEShapley valueSolidarityjel:M2MicroeconomicsCore (game theory)Value (economics)jel:C0Economicsjel:D5Statistics Probability and UncertaintyBusiness and International Managementjel:B4jel:C6jel:D7Mathematical economicsjel:C7International Game Theory Review
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Endogenous R&D Symmetry in Linear Duopoly with One-way Spillovers

2005

A duopoly model of cost reducing R&D-Cournot market competition is extended to encompass endogenous timing of R&D investments. Under the assumption that R&D spillovers are zero under simultaneous choices of R&D and only flow from the R&D leader to the follower under sequential choices, sequential and simultaneous play at the R&D stage are compared in order to assess the role of technological externalities in stimulating or attenuating endogenous firm asymmetry. The only timing structure of the R&D stage sustainable as subgame–perfect Nash equilibrium involves simultaneous play and thus zero spillovers.

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and EconometricsStackelberg equilibriumEndogenous timingmedia_common.quotation_subjectjel:D43Settore SECS-P/06 - Economia ApplicataAsymmetryCompetition (economics)Microeconomicssymbols.namesakeStrategic investmentR&D with spillovers Firm AsymmetryStackelberg competitionEconomicsDuopolymedia_commonjel:C72Endogenous symmetryendogenous symmetry endogenous timing Stackelberg equilibriumjel:L11Nash equilibriumjel:L13symbolsendogenous timing stackelberg equilibriumSymmetry (geometry)Mathematical economicsSSRN Electronic Journal
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