Search results for "non-cooperative game"

showing 6 items of 16 documents

A note on cooperative versus non-cooperative strategies in international pollution control

2002

Abstract In this note, we evaluate the scope of Dockner and Long’s [Journal of Environment Economics and Management 24 (1993) 13] conclusion on the efficiency of the non-cooperative outcome in a differential game of international pollution control. We also complete the study of the different equilibria the differential game can present. Our results show that their conclusion requires that the initial value of the stock of pollution be higher than the Pareto-efficient pollution stock so that the equilibrium path of emissions involves a decreasing stock of pollution. Our results also show that the application of the procedure proposed by Tsutsui and Mino [Journal of Economic Theory 52 (1990) …

PollutionEconomics and EconometricsNon-cooperative gameOperations researchmedia_common.quotation_subjectAir pollutionmedicine.disease_causeMicroeconomicsPollution preventionDifferential gamemedicineEconomicsInitial value problemGame theoryStock (geology)media_commonResource and Energy Economics
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Robust dynamic cooperative games

2009

Classical cooperative game theory is no longer a suitable tool for those situations where the values of coalitions are not known with certainty. Recent works address situations where the values of coalitions are modelled by random variables. In this work we still consider the values of coalitions as uncertain, but model them as unknown but bounded disturbances. We do not focus on solving a specific game, but rather consider a family of games described by a polyhedron: each point in the polyhedron is a vector of coalitions’ values and corresponds to a specific game. We consider a dynamic context where while we know with certainty the average value of each coalition on the long run, at each t…

Statistics and ProbabilityBondareva–Shapley theoremEconomics and EconometricsNon-cooperative gameComputer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryMSC-91A12Sequential gameMSC-91A25Computer scienceCooperative games Dynamic games Joint replenishmentCombinatorial game theoryTheoryofComputation_GENERALCooperative game theoryMETIS-263773Computer Science::Multiagent SystemsMathematics (miscellaneous)Example of a game without a valueEWI-15215Repeated gameIR-62781Simultaneous gameStatistics Probability and UncertaintyMathematical economicsSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)International journal of game theory
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WITHIN-TEAM COMPETITION IN THE MINIMUM EFFORT COORDINATION GAME

2006

.  We report the results of an experiment on a continuous version of the minimum effort coordination game. The introduction of within-team competition significantly increases effort levels relative to a baseline with no competition and increases coordination relative to a secure treatment where the pay-off-dominant equilibrium strategy weakly dominates all other actions. Nonetheless, within-team competition does not prevent subjects from polarizing both in the efficient and the inefficient equilibria.

TheoryofComputation_MISCELLANEOUSCompetition (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsNon-cooperative gameEconomicsCoordination gameBaseline (configuration management)Industrial organizationPacific Economic Review
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Consensus in Noncooperative Dynamic Games: a Multi-Retailer Inventory Application

2008

We focus on Nash equilibria and Pareto optimal Nash equilibria for a finite horizon noncooperative dynamic game with a special structure of the stage cost. We study the existence of these solutions by proving that the game is a potential game. For the single-stage version of the game, we characterize the aforementioned solutions and derive a consensus protocol that makes the players converge to the unique Pareto optimal Nash equilibrium. Such an equilibrium guarantees the interests of the players and is also social optimal in the set of Nash equilibria. For the multistage version of the game, we present an algorithm that converges to Nash equilibria, unfortunately, not necessarily Pareto op…

TheoryofComputation_MISCELLANEOUSComputer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryCorrelated equilibriumSequential gameComputer scienceDynamic programmingSubgame perfect equilibriumsymbols.namesakeCoordination gameElectrical and Electronic EngineeringRisk dominanceFolk theoremPrice of stabilityNon-credible threatGame theoryCentipede gameImplementation theoryNon-cooperative gameInventoryNormal-form gameStochastic gameComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGTheoryofComputation_GENERALComputer Science ApplicationsConsensus protocols; Dynamic programming; Game theory; InventoryConsensus protocolsZero-sum gameControl and Systems EngineeringNash equilibriumEquilibrium selectionBest responsesymbolsRepeated gameEpsilon-equilibriumConsensus protocols; Dynamic programming; Game theory; Inventory;Potential gameSolution conceptMathematical economicsGame theory
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Existence and Optimality of Nash Equilibria in Inventory Games

2005

Abstract This paper studies the stability and optimality of a distributed consensus protocol for n -player repeated non cooperative games under incomplete information. At each stage, the players choose binary strategies and incur in a payoff monotonically decreasing with the number of active players. The game is specialized to an inventory application, where fixed costs are shared among all retailers, interested in whether reordering or not from a common warehouse. The authors focus on Pareto optimality as a measure of coordination of reordering strategies, proving that there exists a unique Pareto optimal Nash equilibrium that verifies certain stability conditions.

TheoryofComputation_MISCELLANEOUSComputer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryNon-cooperative gameMathematical optimizationStochastic gameTheoryofComputation_GENERALInventory control Stability Optimality Nash equilibriumInventory control; Nash equilibrium; Optimality; Stability;symbols.namesakeNash equilibriumBest responseRepeated gamesymbolsEconomicsCoordination gameEpsilon-equilibriumRisk dominanceMathematical economics
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Theoretical Models of Industrial Espionage

2012

Dada la importancia del espionaje industrial en la realidad económica, el objetivo de la presente tesis es analizar teóricamente el comportamiento de las empresas a la hora de obtener información de sus competidores, para poder comprenderlo mejor y ver cuáles pueden ser sus consecuencias, ya que, aunque el espionaje industrial es una práctica muy extendida, pocos trabajos teóricos han tratado de analizarlo. Más concretamente, nuestro objetivo es analizar teóricamente el impacto del espionaje industrial sobre el comportamiento estratégico de las empresas en un contexto de disuasión de la entrada usando las herramientas propias de la Teoría de Juegos. En los modelos de la presente tesis se co…

non-cooperative games:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Organización industrial y política pública::Monopolio y competencia [UNESCO]Espionagesignaling gamesUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Organización industrial y política pública::Monopolio y competenciaentry:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Teoría económica::Teoría microeconómica [UNESCO]Espionage; entry; non-cooperative games; signaling games;UNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Teoría económica::Teoría microeconómica
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