Controlling chaos through local knowledge
From MaRDI portal
Publication:603960
DOI10.1016/j.chaos.2009.03.109zbMath1198.91121OpenAlexW2003771849MaRDI QIDQ603960
Fabio Tramontana, Ahmad K. Naimzada
Publication date: 8 November 2010
Published in: Chaos, Solitons and Fractals (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://www.econ.uniurb.it/RePEc/urb/wpaper/WP_08_10.pdf
Economics of information (91B44) Dynamical systems in optimization and economics (37N40) Economic dynamics (91B55)
Related Items (17)
A Cournot duopoly game with heterogeneous players: nonlinear dynamics of the gradient rule versus local monopolistic approach ⋮ Nonlinear dynamics and convergence speed of heterogeneous Cournot duopolies involving best response mechanisms with different degrees of rationality ⋮ Unnamed Item ⋮ Dynamical analysis of a Cournot duopoly model ⋮ Complex dynamic properties of Cournot duopoly games with convex and log-concave demand function ⋮ Imitative and best response behaviors in a nonlinear Cournotian setting ⋮ Complex dynamics and multistability with increasing rationality in market games ⋮ Introducing a price variation limiter mechanism into a behavioral financial market model ⋮ Nonlinear dynamics of a duopoly Stackelberg game with marginal costs ⋮ Heterogeneous players in a Cournot model with differentiated products ⋮ An evolutionary model with best response and imitative rules ⋮ Effects of size, composition, and evolutionary pressure in heterogeneous Cournot oligopolies with best response decisional mechanisms ⋮ Heterogeneity and the (de)stabilizing role of rationality ⋮ An oligopoly model with rational and imitation rules ⋮ Nonlinear dynamics and global analysis of a heterogeneous Cournot duopoly with a local monopolistic approach versus a gradient rule with endogenous reactivity ⋮ The rise of complex phenomena in Cournot duopoly games due to demand functions without inflection points ⋮ An oligopoly model with best response and imitation rules
Cites Work
This page was built for publication: Controlling chaos through local knowledge