Effects of Network Characteristics on Reaching the Payoff-Dominant Equilibrium in Coordination Games: A Simulation study

Publication date

2016

Authors

Buskens, V.W.ORCID 0000-0002-4483-7238ISNI 0000000115699289
Snijders, Chris

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

We study how payoffs and network structure affect reaching the payoff-dominant equilibrium in a [Formula: see text] coordination game that actors play with their neighbors in a network. Using an extensive simulation analysis of over 100,000 networks with 2-25 actors, we show that the importance of network characteristics is restricted to a limited part of the payoff space. In this part, we conclude that the payoff-dominant equilibrium is chosen more often if network density is larger, the network is more centralized, and segmentation of the network is smaller. Moreover, it is more likely that heterogeneity in behavior persists if the network is more segmented and less centralized. Persistence of heterogeneous behavior is not related to network density.

Keywords

Coordination, Social networks, Dynamic games, Simulation methods, Taverne

Citation

Buskens, V & Snijders, C 2016, 'Effects of Network Characteristics on Reaching the Payoff-Dominant Equilibrium in Coordination Games : A Simulation study', Dynamic Games and Applications, vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 477-494. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13235-015-0144-4