Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments

The main theme of my dissertation is the analysis of several interactive decision making situations with multiple decision makers whose interests do not fully coincide. Non-cooperative game theory is invoked to carry on this analysis.The first chapter describes an experimental study of volunteer...

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Main Author: Otsubo, Hironori
Other Authors: Rapoport, Amnon
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194255
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1942552015-10-23T04:40:45Z Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments Otsubo, Hironori Rapoport, Amnon Rapoport, Amnon Dufwenberg, Martin Wooders, John Economics The main theme of my dissertation is the analysis of several interactive decision making situations with multiple decision makers whose interests do not fully coincide. Non-cooperative game theory is invoked to carry on this analysis.The first chapter describes an experimental study of volunteer's dilemmas that evolve over time. Only a single volunteer is required for the public good to be provided. Because volunteering is costly, each prefers that some other players bear the full costs of volunteering. Reflecting on the observation that in many naturally occurring social dilemmas it is beneficial to volunteer earlier than later, I assume that the payoff to the volunteer and the (higher) payoff to each of the non-volunteers decrease monotonically over time. I derive symmetric and asymmetric subgame perfect equilibria. The experimental results provide little support to asymmetric equilibria in which only a single subject volunteers immediately. In comparison to the symmetric subgame perfect equilibrium, they show that subjects volunteer, on average, earlier than predicted.The second chapter explores a new type of online auction, called the unique bid auction, that has recently emerged on the Internet and gained widespread popularity in many countries. In a sharp contrast to traditional auctions, the winner in this class of auctions is the bidder who submits the lowest (highest) unique bid; all ties are discarded. I propose an algorithm to numerically compute the symmetric mixed-strategy Nash equilibrium solution and then conduct a series of experiments to assess the predictive power of the equilibrium solution. The experimental results show that the solution accounts quite well for the subjects' bidding behavior on the aggregate level, but not on the individual level.The last chapter proposes a discrete version of William Vickrey's model of traffic congestion on a single road with a single bottleneck. In my model, both the strategy space and number of commuters are finite. An algorithm similar to the one used in the second chapter is proposed to numerically calculate the symmetric mixed-strategy Nash equilibrium. The discrete model is then compared with the original continuous model of Vickrey in terms of the equilibrium solution and its implications. 2008 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194255 659749864 2807 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Economics
spellingShingle Economics
Otsubo, Hironori
Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments
description The main theme of my dissertation is the analysis of several interactive decision making situations with multiple decision makers whose interests do not fully coincide. Non-cooperative game theory is invoked to carry on this analysis.The first chapter describes an experimental study of volunteer's dilemmas that evolve over time. Only a single volunteer is required for the public good to be provided. Because volunteering is costly, each prefers that some other players bear the full costs of volunteering. Reflecting on the observation that in many naturally occurring social dilemmas it is beneficial to volunteer earlier than later, I assume that the payoff to the volunteer and the (higher) payoff to each of the non-volunteers decrease monotonically over time. I derive symmetric and asymmetric subgame perfect equilibria. The experimental results provide little support to asymmetric equilibria in which only a single subject volunteers immediately. In comparison to the symmetric subgame perfect equilibrium, they show that subjects volunteer, on average, earlier than predicted.The second chapter explores a new type of online auction, called the unique bid auction, that has recently emerged on the Internet and gained widespread popularity in many countries. In a sharp contrast to traditional auctions, the winner in this class of auctions is the bidder who submits the lowest (highest) unique bid; all ties are discarded. I propose an algorithm to numerically compute the symmetric mixed-strategy Nash equilibrium solution and then conduct a series of experiments to assess the predictive power of the equilibrium solution. The experimental results show that the solution accounts quite well for the subjects' bidding behavior on the aggregate level, but not on the individual level.The last chapter proposes a discrete version of William Vickrey's model of traffic congestion on a single road with a single bottleneck. In my model, both the strategy space and number of commuters are finite. An algorithm similar to the one used in the second chapter is proposed to numerically calculate the symmetric mixed-strategy Nash equilibrium. The discrete model is then compared with the original continuous model of Vickrey in terms of the equilibrium solution and its implications.
author2 Rapoport, Amnon
author_facet Rapoport, Amnon
Otsubo, Hironori
author Otsubo, Hironori
author_sort Otsubo, Hironori
title Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments
title_short Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments
title_full Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments
title_fullStr Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas, Unique Bid Auctions, and Discrete Bottleneck Games: Theory and Experiments
title_sort dynamic volunteer's dilemmas, unique bid auctions, and discrete bottleneck games: theory and experiments
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194255
work_keys_str_mv AT otsubohironori dynamicvolunteersdilemmasuniquebidauctionsanddiscretebottleneckgamestheoryandexperiments
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