We study hedonic coalition formation games in which cooperation among the players is restricted by a graph structure: a subset of players can form a coalition if and only if they are connected in the given graph. We investigate the complexity of finding stable outcomes in such games, for several notions of stability. In particular, we provide an efficient algorithm that finds an individually stable partition for an arbitrary hedonic game on an acyclic graph. We also introduce a new stability concept---in-neighbor stability---which is tailored for our setting. We show that the problem of finding an in-neighbor stable outcome admits a polynomial-time algorithm if the underlying graph is a path, but is NP-hard for arbitrary trees even for addi...
We consider hedonic games with separable preferences, and explore the existence of stable coalition ...
I study the existence of Nash-stable and individually stable coalition structures in hedonic coaliti...
A community needs to be partitioned into disjoint groups; each community member has an underlying pr...
We study hedonic coalition formation games in which cooperation among the players is restricted by a...
In hedonic games, players form coalitions based on individual preferences over the group of players ...
International audienceWe study a hedonic game for which the feasible coalitions are prescribed by a ...
Hedonic games are a well-studied model of coalition formation, in which selfish agents are partition...
The formal study of coalition formation in multi-agent systems is typically realized in the framewor...
International audienceThe formal study of coalition formation in multiagent systems is typically rea...
Hedonic games are a well-studied model of coalition formation, in which selfish agents are partition...
International audienceWe consider fractional hedonic games, a subclass of coalition formation games ...
We investigate verification and existence problems for prominent stability concepts in hedonic games...
Hedonic games provide a model of coalition formation in which a set of agents is partitioned into co...
We investigate the computational complexity of several decision problems in hedonic coalition format...
Coalition formation provides a versatile framework for ana-lyzing cooperative behavior in multi-agen...
We consider hedonic games with separable preferences, and explore the existence of stable coalition ...
I study the existence of Nash-stable and individually stable coalition structures in hedonic coaliti...
A community needs to be partitioned into disjoint groups; each community member has an underlying pr...
We study hedonic coalition formation games in which cooperation among the players is restricted by a...
In hedonic games, players form coalitions based on individual preferences over the group of players ...
International audienceWe study a hedonic game for which the feasible coalitions are prescribed by a ...
Hedonic games are a well-studied model of coalition formation, in which selfish agents are partition...
The formal study of coalition formation in multi-agent systems is typically realized in the framewor...
International audienceThe formal study of coalition formation in multiagent systems is typically rea...
Hedonic games are a well-studied model of coalition formation, in which selfish agents are partition...
International audienceWe consider fractional hedonic games, a subclass of coalition formation games ...
We investigate verification and existence problems for prominent stability concepts in hedonic games...
Hedonic games provide a model of coalition formation in which a set of agents is partitioned into co...
We investigate the computational complexity of several decision problems in hedonic coalition format...
Coalition formation provides a versatile framework for ana-lyzing cooperative behavior in multi-agen...
We consider hedonic games with separable preferences, and explore the existence of stable coalition ...
I study the existence of Nash-stable and individually stable coalition structures in hedonic coaliti...
A community needs to be partitioned into disjoint groups; each community member has an underlying pr...