A variational inequality framework for network games: existence, uniqueness, convergence and sensitivity analysis

From MaRDI portal
Publication:1735796

DOI10.1016/j.geb.2018.11.012zbMath1419.91160arXiv1712.08277OpenAlexW2963384252WikidataQ128639716 ScholiaQ128639716MaRDI QIDQ1735796

Asuman Ozdaglar, Francesca Parise

Publication date: 29 March 2019

Published in: Games and Economic Behavior (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1712.08277



Related Items

A note on Fokker-Planck equations and graphons, Finite state graphon games with applications to epidemics, Label Correlation Propagation for Semi-supervised Multi-label Learning, Mechanism design for demand management in energy communities, Stochastic graphon games. II: The linear-quadratic case, A finite convergence algorithm for solving linear-quadratic network games with strategic complements and bounded strategies, Best-response dynamics in directed network games, Mean-Field Approximations for Stochastic Population Processes with Heterogeneous Interactions, Evolution of Mixed Strategies in Monotone Games, Equilibrium characterization and shock propagation in conflict networks, Generalized Nash equilibrium models for asymmetric, non-cooperative games on line graphs: application to water resource systems, A Variational Inequality Approach to a Class of Network Games with Local Complementarities and Global Congestion, Targeting in social networks with anonymized information, STRUCTURAL INTERVENTIONS IN NETWORKS, Farsighted manipulation and exploitation in networks, A note on generalized Nash games played on networks, Welfare targeting in networks, Random Walks on Dense Graphs and Graphons, Minimum and maximum principle sufficiency for a nonsmooth variational inequality, A note on network games with strategic complements and the Katz-Bonacich centrality measure, A variational formulation of network games with random utility functions, On the uniqueness of quantal response equilibria and its application to network games, The Buck-Passing Game



Cites Work