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Economic agents care about their relative well-being, and the comparisons are usually local. We capture this using a network model, in which an agent's payoff depends on the ranking of their allocation among their network neighbors. Given a network, an allocation is called α-stable if no...
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Economic agents care about their relative well-being, and the comparisons are usually local. We capture this using a network model, in which an agent's payoff depends on the ranking of their allocation among their network neighbors’. Given a network, an allocation is called α-stable if no...
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Previous allocation rules for network games, such as the Myerson Value, implicitly or explicitly take the network structure as fixed. In many situations, however, the network structure can be altered by players. This means that the value of alternative network structures (not just sub-networks)...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011591365
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- PART I. BACKGROUND AND FUNDAMENTALS OF NETWORK ANALYSIS -- PART II. MODELS OF NETWORK FORMATION -- PART III. IMPLICATIONS OF NETWORK STRUCTURE -- PART IV. METHODS, TOOLS, AND EMPIRICAL ANALYSES -- Afterword -- Bibliography -- Index
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