13,040 research outputs found
On the Construction of Substitutes
Gross substitutability is a central concept in Economics and is connected to
important notions in Discrete Convex Analysis, Number Theory and the analysis
of Greedy algorithms in Computer Science. Many different characterizations are
known for this class, but providing a constructive description remains a major
open problem. The construction problem asks how to construct all gross
substitutes from a class of simpler functions using a set of operations. Since
gross substitutes are a natural generalization of matroids to real-valued
functions, matroid rank functions form a desirable such class of simpler
functions.
Shioura proved that a rich class of gross substitutes can be expressed as
sums of matroid rank functions, but it is open whether all gross substitutes
can be constructed this way. Our main result is a negative answer showing that
some gross substitutes cannot be expressed as positive linear combinations of
matroid rank functions. En route, we provide necessary and sufficient
conditions for the sum to preserve substitutability, uncover a new operation
preserving substitutability and fully describe all substitutes with at most 4
items
Price Competition in Online Combinatorial Markets
We consider a single buyer with a combinatorial preference that would like to
purchase related products and services from different vendors, where each
vendor supplies exactly one product. We study the general case where subsets of
products can be substitutes as well as complementary and analyze the game that
is induced on the vendors, where a vendor's strategy is the price that he asks
for his product. This model generalizes both Bertrand competition (where
vendors are perfect substitutes) and Nash bargaining (where they are perfect
complements), and captures a wide variety of scenarios that can appear in
complex crowd sourcing or in automatic pricing of related products.
We study the equilibria of such games and show that a pure efficient
equilibrium always exists. In the case of submodular buyer preferences we fully
characterize the set of pure Nash equilibria, essentially showing uniqueness.
For the even more restricted "substitutes" buyer preferences we also prove
uniqueness over {\em mixed} equilibria. Finally we begin the exploration of
natural generalizations of our setting such as when services have costs, when
there are multiple buyers or uncertainty about the the buyer's valuation, and
when a single vendor supplies multiple products.Comment: accept to WWW'14 (23rd International World Wide Web Conference
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