Three Essays on Networks

This dissertation consists of three essays studying human behavior and contagion phenomenon in networks. The analysis especially focuses on information sharing, trade relationship and pest spread in networks. The first chapter outlines the dissertation by briefly discussing the motivations, methods,...

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Main Author: Shi, Bowen
Other Authors: Economics
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/96195
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-961952020-09-29T05:33:16Z Three Essays on Networks Shi, Bowen Economics Sarangi, Sudipta Haller, Hans H. Bravard, Christophe Ball, Sheryl B. Tsang, Kwok Ping Bahel, Eric A. Network Information International Trade Contagion This dissertation consists of three essays studying human behavior and contagion phenomenon in networks. The analysis especially focuses on information sharing, trade relationship and pest spread in networks. The first chapter outlines the dissertation by briefly discussing the motivations, methods, and main findings in each of the following chapters. Chapter two examines the information sharing in networks. We develop a heterogenous agents model in which connections between players act as a channel to exchange information. We focus on specialized equilibria, which is based on Nash tatonnement. It is shown that players utilize the signals in the linear form and only specialized equilibria can be stable. We also compare the sequential equilibria and stable equilibria, and it is shown that stable equilibria form a proper subset of the sequential ones, which gives a sharper prediction. The stable equilibria demonstrate star-like graphs, which is similar to the phenomenon "the law of the few" in the literature. Chapter three investigates the trade relationship among players where trade between two players can bring benefits as well as conflict. And if conflict happens, the players coordinate based on received information. We show that the optimal structure of trade networks ranges from complete market to Autarky. Also, we study the optimal timing for trade relationship establishment and the optimal size of organizations when facing scarce members. It is shown that when potential neighbors become more scarce, people care more about the future, or new technology breakthroughs occur more frequently, it is optimal to have more neighbors to back up for the potential technological breakthrough. The last chapter studies the pest spread in the networks. We use a directional and weighted network to study the spread of Tuta absoluta. A robust network-based approach is proposed to model seasonal flow of agricultural produce and examine its role in pest spread. Furthermore, the long-term establishment potential of the pest and its economic impact on the country are assessed. Preliminary analyses indicate that Tuta absoluta will invade most major tomato production regions within a year of introduction and the economic impact of invasion could range from $17-25 million. Ph. D. 2019-12-22T07:01:18Z 2019-12-22T07:01:18Z 2018-06-29 Dissertation vt_gsexam:16338 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/96195 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Network
Information
International Trade
Contagion
spellingShingle Network
Information
International Trade
Contagion
Shi, Bowen
Three Essays on Networks
description This dissertation consists of three essays studying human behavior and contagion phenomenon in networks. The analysis especially focuses on information sharing, trade relationship and pest spread in networks. The first chapter outlines the dissertation by briefly discussing the motivations, methods, and main findings in each of the following chapters. Chapter two examines the information sharing in networks. We develop a heterogenous agents model in which connections between players act as a channel to exchange information. We focus on specialized equilibria, which is based on Nash tatonnement. It is shown that players utilize the signals in the linear form and only specialized equilibria can be stable. We also compare the sequential equilibria and stable equilibria, and it is shown that stable equilibria form a proper subset of the sequential ones, which gives a sharper prediction. The stable equilibria demonstrate star-like graphs, which is similar to the phenomenon "the law of the few" in the literature. Chapter three investigates the trade relationship among players where trade between two players can bring benefits as well as conflict. And if conflict happens, the players coordinate based on received information. We show that the optimal structure of trade networks ranges from complete market to Autarky. Also, we study the optimal timing for trade relationship establishment and the optimal size of organizations when facing scarce members. It is shown that when potential neighbors become more scarce, people care more about the future, or new technology breakthroughs occur more frequently, it is optimal to have more neighbors to back up for the potential technological breakthrough. The last chapter studies the pest spread in the networks. We use a directional and weighted network to study the spread of Tuta absoluta. A robust network-based approach is proposed to model seasonal flow of agricultural produce and examine its role in pest spread. Furthermore, the long-term establishment potential of the pest and its economic impact on the country are assessed. Preliminary analyses indicate that Tuta absoluta will invade most major tomato production regions within a year of introduction and the economic impact of invasion could range from $17-25 million. === Ph. D.
author2 Economics
author_facet Economics
Shi, Bowen
author Shi, Bowen
author_sort Shi, Bowen
title Three Essays on Networks
title_short Three Essays on Networks
title_full Three Essays on Networks
title_fullStr Three Essays on Networks
title_full_unstemmed Three Essays on Networks
title_sort three essays on networks
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/96195
work_keys_str_mv AT shibowen threeessaysonnetworks
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