TY - GEN
T1 - Co-adaptive strategies for sequential bargaining problems with discount factors and outside options
AU - Jin, Nanlin
AU - Tsang, Edward
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Bargaining is fundamental in social activities. Game-theoretic methodology has provided theoretic solutions for certain abstract models. Even for a simple model, this method demands substantial human intelligent effort in order to solve game-theoretic equilibriums. The analytic complexity increases rapidly when more elements are included in the models. In our previous work, we have demonstrated how coevolutionary algorithms can be used to find approximations to game-theoretic equilibriums of bargaining models that consider bargaining costs only. In this paper, we study more complicated bargaining models, in which outside option is taken into account besides bargaining cost. Empirical studies demonstrate that evolutionary algorithms are efficient in finding near-perfect solutions. Experimental results reflect the compound effects of discount factors and outside options upon bargaining outcomes. We argue that evolutionary algorithm is a practical tool for generating reasonably good strategies for complicated bargaining models beyond the capability of game theory.
AB - Bargaining is fundamental in social activities. Game-theoretic methodology has provided theoretic solutions for certain abstract models. Even for a simple model, this method demands substantial human intelligent effort in order to solve game-theoretic equilibriums. The analytic complexity increases rapidly when more elements are included in the models. In our previous work, we have demonstrated how coevolutionary algorithms can be used to find approximations to game-theoretic equilibriums of bargaining models that consider bargaining costs only. In this paper, we study more complicated bargaining models, in which outside option is taken into account besides bargaining cost. Empirical studies demonstrate that evolutionary algorithms are efficient in finding near-perfect solutions. Experimental results reflect the compound effects of discount factors and outside options upon bargaining outcomes. We argue that evolutionary algorithm is a practical tool for generating reasonably good strategies for complicated bargaining models beyond the capability of game theory.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34547250175&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference Proceeding
AN - SCOPUS:34547250175
SN - 0780394879
SN - 9780780394872
T3 - 2006 IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation, CEC 2006
SP - 2149
EP - 2156
BT - 2006 IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation, CEC 2006
T2 - 2006 IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation, CEC 2006
Y2 - 16 July 2006 through 21 July 2006
ER -