We study the consequences of adopting products by agents who form a social network. To this end we use the threshold model introduced in [1], in which the nodes influenced by their neighbours can adopt one out of several alternatives, and associate with each such social network a strategic game between the agents. The possibility of not choosing any product results in two special types of (pure) Nash equilibria. We show that such games may have no Nash equilibrium and that determining the existence of a Nash equilibrium, also of a special type, is NP-complete. The situation changes when the underlying graph of the social network is a DAG, a simple cycle, or has no source nodes. For these three classes we determine the complexity of establis...
We show that various paradoxes can arise in a natural class of social networks. They demonstrate tha...
Within the context of games on networks S. Goyal (Goyal (2007), pg. 39) posed the following problem....
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interactions, different models ha...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents' behaviour. T...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents’ behaviour. ...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents ’ behaviour. ...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents’ behaviour. ...
We introduce a new threshold model of social networks, in which the nodes influenced by their neighb...
We study a game-theoretic model for the diffusion of competing products in social networks. Particul...
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interac-tions, different models h...
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interactions, different models ha...
We introduce a new threshold model of social networks, in which the nodes influenced by their neighb...
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interactions, different models h...
We introduce a new threshold model of social networks, in which the nodes influenced by their neighb...
We show that various paradoxes can arise in a natural class of social networks. They demonstrate tha...
We show that various paradoxes can arise in a natural class of social networks. They demonstrate tha...
Within the context of games on networks S. Goyal (Goyal (2007), pg. 39) posed the following problem....
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interactions, different models ha...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents' behaviour. T...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents’ behaviour. ...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents ’ behaviour. ...
One of the natural objectives of the field of the social networks is to predict agents’ behaviour. ...
We introduce a new threshold model of social networks, in which the nodes influenced by their neighb...
We study a game-theoretic model for the diffusion of competing products in social networks. Particul...
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interac-tions, different models h...
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interactions, different models ha...
We introduce a new threshold model of social networks, in which the nodes influenced by their neighb...
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interactions, different models h...
We introduce a new threshold model of social networks, in which the nodes influenced by their neighb...
We show that various paradoxes can arise in a natural class of social networks. They demonstrate tha...
We show that various paradoxes can arise in a natural class of social networks. They demonstrate tha...
Within the context of games on networks S. Goyal (Goyal (2007), pg. 39) posed the following problem....
Given their importance in determining the outcome of many economic interactions, different models ha...