We model the formation of friendships as repeated cooperation within a set of heterogeneous players. The model builds around three of the most important facts about friendship: friends help each other, there is reciprocity in the relationship and people usually have few friends. In our results we explain how similarity between people affects the friendship selection. We also characterize when the friendship network won’t depend on the random process by which people meet each other. Finally, we explore how players’ patience influences the length of their friendship relations. Our results match and explain empirical evidence reported in social studies on friendship. For instance, our model explains why troublesome subjects have few friends.Fr...
We propose a class of actor-oriented statistical models for closed social networks in general, and f...
Most research on similarity in friendship networks focuses on clearly visible individual attributes ...
Friendship is both ubiquitous and economically important, but neglected in the economic literature. ...
We model the formation of friendships as repeated cooperation within a set of heterogeneous players....
The forming of human social ties tends to be with similar individuals. This study concentrates on th...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
We study friendship networks under the assumption that people are constrained to build the qualities...
This paper studies the e¤ect of social relations on the convergence to the e ¢ cient equilibrium in ...
We extend the model of friendship networks developed by Brueckner (2006) in two ways. First, we exte...
We propose a class of actor-oriented statistical models for closed social networks in general, and f...
We propose a class of actor-oriented statistical models for closed social networks in general, and f...
Most research on similarity in friendship networks focuses on clearly visible individual attributes ...
Friendship is both ubiquitous and economically important, but neglected in the economic literature. ...
We model the formation of friendships as repeated cooperation within a set of heterogeneous players....
The forming of human social ties tends to be with similar individuals. This study concentrates on th...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
This article is an extension to Zeggelink (1994) which introduced the individual-oriented approach t...
We study friendship networks under the assumption that people are constrained to build the qualities...
This paper studies the e¤ect of social relations on the convergence to the e ¢ cient equilibrium in ...
We extend the model of friendship networks developed by Brueckner (2006) in two ways. First, we exte...
We propose a class of actor-oriented statistical models for closed social networks in general, and f...
We propose a class of actor-oriented statistical models for closed social networks in general, and f...
Most research on similarity in friendship networks focuses on clearly visible individual attributes ...
Friendship is both ubiquitous and economically important, but neglected in the economic literature. ...