The value of network information: assortative mixing makes the difference
DOI10.1016/J.GEB.2020.12.008zbMATH Open1458.91088OpenAlexW3121865860MaRDI QIDQ1995498FDOQ1995498
Authors: Mohamed Belhaj, Frédéric Deroïan
Publication date: 23 February 2021
Published in: Games and Economic Behavior (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01314954/file/WP%202016%20-%20Nr%2018.pdf
Recommendations
Consumer behavior, demand theory (91B42) Microeconomic theory (price theory and economic markets) (91B24) Economics of information (91B44)
Cites Work
- Who's Who in Networks. Wanted: The Key Player
- Network games
- Large scale structure and dynamics of complex networks. From information technology to finance and natural science.
- How homophily affects the speed of learning and best-response dynamics
- Network games with incomplete information
- An Economic Model of Friendship: Homophily, Minorities, and Segregation
- Optimal pricing in networks with externalities
- Experimental games on networks: underpinnings of behavior and equilibrium selection
- Homophily and long-run integration in social networks
- Pricing network effects
- Robustness of equilibria in anonymous local games
- Is assortative matching efficient?
- Information acquisition and welfare in network games
Cited In (3)
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