Papers
80
Recent publications related to complex systems
Follow
Scooped by Complexity Digest onto Papers
Scoop.it!

Paradoxes in Social Networks with Multiple Products

Recently, we introduced in arXiv:1105.2434 a model for product adoption in social networks with multiple products, where the agents, influenced by their neighbours, can adopt one out of several alternatives. We identify and analyze here four types of paradoxes that can arise in these networks. To this end, we use social network games that we recently introduced in arXiv:1211.5938. These paradoxes shed light on possible inefficiencies arising when one modifies the sets of products available to the agents forming a social network. One of the paradoxes corresponds to the well-known Braess paradox in congestion games and shows that by adding more choices to a node, the network may end up in a situation that is (weakly) worse for everybody. We exhibit a dual version of this, where removing available choices from someone can eventually make everybody better off. The other paradoxes that we identify show that by adding or removing a product from the choice set of some node may lead to permanent instability. Finally, we also identify conditions under which some of these paradoxes cannot arise.

 

Paradoxes in Social Networks with Multiple Products

Krzysztof R. Apt, Evangelos Markakis, Sunil Simon

http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.7592

No comment yet.
Complexity Digest is also curating
Talks CxBooks CxConferences CxAnnouncements
Discover Topics Complexity Digest is following
Amazing Science Social Foraging Global Brain Conciencia Colectiva Infotention The Internet of Things
and 43 others
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Complexity Digest from cognition
Scoop.it!

Reasoning Is Sharper in a Foreign Language

Reasoning Is Sharper in a Foreign Language | Papers | Scoop.it
We might be least rational about money in our native tongues...

 

“When people use a foreign language, their decisions tend to be less biased, more analytic, more systematic, because the foreign language provides psychological distance,”


Via FastTFriend
No comment yet.