How can the tragedy of the commons be prevented?: Introducing Linear Quadratic Mixed Mean Field Games
In a regular mean field game (MFG), the agents are assumed to be insignificant, they do not realize their effect on the population level and this may result in a phenomenon coined as the Tragedy of the Commons by the economists. However, in real life this phenomenon is often avoided thanks to the un...
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Zusammenfassung: | In a regular mean field game (MFG), the agents are assumed to be
insignificant, they do not realize their effect on the population level and
this may result in a phenomenon coined as the Tragedy of the Commons by the
economists. However, in real life this phenomenon is often avoided thanks to
the underlying altruistic behavior of (all or some of the) agents. Motivated by
this observation, we introduce and analyze two different mean field models to
include altruism in the decision making of agents. In the first model, mixed
individual MFGs, there are infinitely many agents who are partially altruistic
(i.e., they behave partially cooperatively) and partially non-cooperative. In
the second model, mixed population MFGs, one part of the population behaves
cooperatively and the remaining agents behave non-cooperatively. Both models
are introduced in a general linear quadratic framework for which we
characterize the equilibrium via forward backward stochastic differential
equations. Furthermore, we give explicit solutions in terms of ordinary
differential equations, and prove the existence and uniqueness results. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.08235 |