Economic and Game Theory
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"Inside every small problem is a large problem struggling to get out." | ||||||
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I have an updating scheme which always seem to converge to the same fixed point. Using Brouwer's fixed point theorem, I can proof the existence of a fixed point. However, I wasn't able to proof convergence of my algorithm to a fixed point. Now I found out that my updating scheme is actually equivalent with a finite concave game in game theory (J.B. Rosen "Existence and uniqueness of equilibrium points for concave N-person games"). This means that the fixed point of my scheme is a Nash equilibrium. I was wondering: if a (concave) finite game has at least one Nash equilibrium, will the game always converge to an equilibrium? If not, what are sufficient conditions for convergence? Rosen gives a sufficient condition to have a unique equilibrium, but I am not able to use this in my scheme, since I'm not able to proof that my pay-off functions can be combined to a diagonally strictly concave function. Do you know if there are other sufficient conditions for uniqueness of the equilibrium of a concave game? Thanks in advance! [Manage messages]
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