Adversarial behavior in network games
DOI10.1007/s13235-014-0120-4zbMath1314.91151OpenAlexW1980973893WikidataQ62783154 ScholiaQ62783154MaRDI QIDQ2342743
Anil Chorppath, Tansu Alpcan, Holger Boche
Publication date: 29 April 2015
Published in: Dynamic Games and Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://hdl.handle.net/11343/241546
game theorymechanism designcollusioninterference managementadversarial behaviordetection and counter measures
Noncooperative games (91A10) Applications of game theory (91A80) Auctions, bargaining, bidding and selling, and other market models (91B26) Resource and cost allocation (including fair division, apportionment, etc.) (91B32)
Related Items (2)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- An externality-robust auction: theory and experimental evidence
- Collusive dominant-strategy truthfulness
- Congestion games with malicious players
- Reducing mechanism design to algorithm design via machine learning
- The mathematics of internet congestion control
- Adversarial behavior in network games
- The effect of collusion in congestion games
- Network Security
- Rate control for communication networks: shadow prices, proportional fairness and stability
- A Jamming Game in Wireless Networks with Transmission Cost
- Correlated Equilibrium as an Expression of Bayesian Rationality
- When selfish meets evil
- Efficiency loss in a network resource allocation game: the case of elastic supply
- Existence and Uniqueness of Equilibrium Points for Concave N-Person Games
- Games with Incomplete Information Played by “Bayesian” Players, I–III Part I. The Basic Model
- The price of anarchy is independent of the network topology
- Strategyproof sharing of submodular costs: budget balance versus efficiency
This page was built for publication: Adversarial behavior in network games