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Phase transition in the Kolkata Paise Restaurant problem

Abstract

A novel phase transition behaviour is observed in the Kolkata Paise Restaurant (KPR) problem where large number (NN) of agents or customers collectively (and iteratively) learn to choose among the NN restaurants where she would expect to be alone that evening and would get the only dish available there (or may get randomly picked up if more than one agent arrive there that evening). The players are expected to evolve their strategy such that the publicly available information about past crowd in different restaurants can be utilized and each of them is able to make the best minority choice. For equally ranked restaurants we follow two crowd-avoiding strategies: Strategy I, where each of the ni(t)n_i(t) number of agents arriving at the ii-th restaurant on the tt-th evening goes back to the same restaurant on the next evening with probability [ni(t)]α[n_i(t)]^{-\alpha}, while in Strategy II, with probability pp, when ni(t)>1n_i(t) > 1. We study the steady state (tt-independent) utilization fraction f:(1f)f:(1-f) giving the steady state (wastage) fraction of restaurants going without any customer in any particular evening. With both the strategies we find, near αc=0+\alpha_c=0_+ (in strategy I) or p=1p=1_- (in strategy II), the steady state wastage fraction (1f)(ααc)β(1-f)\propto(\alpha - \alpha_c)^{\beta} or (pcp)β(p_c - p)^\beta with β0.8,0.87,1.0\beta \simeq 0.8, 0.87, 1.0 and the convergence time τ\tau (for f(t)f(t) becoming independent of tt) varies as τ(ααc)γ\tau\propto{(\alpha-\alpha_c)}^{-\gamma} or (pcp)γ{(p_c-p)}^{-\gamma}, with γ1.18,1.11,1.05\gamma \simeq 1.18, 1.11, 1.05 in infinite-dimension (rest of the N1N-1 neighboring restaurants), three-dimension (66 neighbors) and two-dimension (44 neighbors) respectively.Comment: Invited paper for spl. issue on "Dynamics of Social Systems" in Chaos (AIP

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    Last time updated on 05/09/2020