809 research outputs found
Continuity and Equilibrium Stability
This paper discusses the problem of stability of equilibrium points in normal form games in the tremling-hand framework. An equilibrium point is called perffect if it is stable against at least one seqence of trembles approaching zero. A strictly perfect equilibrium point is stable against every such sequence. We give a sufficient condition for a Nash equilibrium point to be strictly perfect in terms of the primitive characteristics of the game (payoffs and strategies), which is new and not known in the literature. In particular, we show that continuity of the best response correspondence (which can be stated in terms of the primitives of the game) implies strict perfectness; we prove a number of other useful theorems regarding the structure of best responce correspondence in normal form games.Strictly perfect equilibrium, best responce correspondence, unit simplex, face of a unit simplex
A Refinement of Perfect Equilibria Based On Substitute Sequences
We propose an equilibrium refinement of strict perfect equilibrium for the finite normal form games, which is not known in the literature. Okada came up with the idea of strict perfect equilibrium by strengthening the main definition of a perfect equilibrium, due to Selten [14]. We consider the alternative (and equivalent) definition of perfect equilibrium, based on the substitute sequences, as appeared in Selten [14]. We show that by strengthening and modifiyng this definition slightly, one can obtain a refinement stronger than strict perfectness. We call the new refinement strict substitute perfect equilibrium. The main advantage of this solution concept is that it reflects the local dominance of an equilibrium point. An example is provided to show that a strict perfect equilibrium may fail to be strict substitute perfect.Perfect equilibrium, strictly perfect equilibrium, substitute sequence, substitute perfect equilibrium, unit simplex
THE CHEAPEST HEDGE:A PORTFOLIO DOMINANCE APPROACH
Investors often wish to insure themselves against the payoff of their portfolios falling below a certain value. One way of doing this is by purchasing an appropriate collection of traded securities. However, when the derivatives market is not complete, an investor who seeks portfolio insurance will also be interested in the cheapest hedge that is marketed. Such insurance will not exactly replicate the desired insured-payoff, but it is the cheapest that can be achieved using the market. Analytically, the problem of finding a cheapest insuring portfolio is a linear programming problem. The present paper provides an alternative portfolio dominance approach to solving the minimum-premium insurance portfolio problem. This affords remarkably rich and intuitive insights to determining and describing the minimum-premium insurance portfolios.
Economies With Many Commodities
We discuss the two fundamental theorems of welfare economics in the context of the Arrow-Debreu-McKenzie model with an infinite dimensional commodity space. As an application, we prove the existence of competitive equilibrium in the standard single agent growth model
Existence and Stability of Standing Pulses in Neural Networks : I Existence
We consider the existence of standing pulse solutions of a neural network
integro-differential equation. These pulses are bistable with the zero state
and may be an analogue for short term memory in the brain. The network consists
of a single-layer of neurons synaptically connected by lateral inhibition. Our
work extends the classic Amari result by considering a non-saturating gain
function. We consider a specific connectivity function where the existence
conditions for single-pulses can be reduced to the solution of an algebraic
system. In addition to the two localized pulse solutions found by Amari, we
find that three or more pulses can coexist. We also show the existence of
nonconvex ``dimpled'' pulses and double pulses. We map out the pulse shapes and
maximum firing rates for different connection weights and gain functions.Comment: 31 pages, 29 figures, submitted to SIAM Journal on Applied Dynamical
System
Convergence in measure under Finite Additivity
We investigate the possibility of replacing the topology of convergence in
probability with convergence in . A characterization of continuous linear
functionals on the space of measurable functions is also obtained
Bilateral Matching with Latin Squares
We develop a general procedure to construct pairwise meeting processes characterized by two features. First, in each period the process maximizes the number of matches in the population. Second, over time agents meet everybody else exactly once. We call this type of meetings absolute strangers. Our methodological contribution to economics is to offer a simple procedure to construct a type of decentralized trading environments usually employed in both theoretical and experimental economics. In particular, we demonstrate how to make use of the mathematics of Latin squares to enrich the modeling of matching economies
A Correspondence-Theoretic Approach to Dynamic Optimization
This paper introduces a method of optimization in infinite-horizon economies based on the theory of correspondences. The proposed approach allow us to study time-separable and non-time-separable dynamic economic models without resorting to fixed point theorems or transversality conditions. When our technique is applied to the standard time-separable model it provides an alternative and straightforward way to derive the common recursive formulation of these models by means of Bellman equations
Matching and Anonymity
This work introduces a rigorous set-theoretic foundation of deterministic bilateral matching processes and studies systematically their properties. In particular, it formalizes a link between matching and informational constraints by developing a notion of anonymity that is based on the agents\u27 matching histories. It also explains why and how various matching processes generate different degrees of informational isolation in the economy. We illustrate the usefulness of our approach to modeling matching frameworks by discussing the classical turnpike model of Townsend
Anonymous Markets and Monetary Trading
We study infinite-horizon monetary economies characterized by trading frictions that originate from random pairwise meetings, and commitment and enforcement limitations. We prove that introducing occasional trade in \u27centralized markets\u27 opens the door to an informal enforcement scheme that sustains a non-monetary efficient allocation. All is required is that trading partners be patient and their actions be observable. We then present a matching environment in which trade may occur in large markets and yet agents\u27 trading paths cross at most once. This allows the construction of models in which infinitely lived agents trade in competitive markets where money plays an essential role
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