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Title: 

Strategic Random Networks

Authors: Golub, Benjamin - Stanford University
Livne, Yair - Stanford University
Keywords: network formation, random graphs, random networks, phase transition
Issue Date: 2010
Series/Report no.: Net Institute Working Paper;10-21
Abstract: To study how economic fundamentals affect the formation of social networks, a model is needed that (i) has agents responding rationally to incentives (ii) can be taken to the data. This paper combines game-theoretic and statistical approaches to network formation in order to develop such a model. Agents spend costly resources to socialize. Their effort levels determine the probabilities of relationships, which are valuable for their direct benefits and also because they lead to other relationships in a second stage of 'meeting friends of friends'. The model predicts random graphs with tunable degree distributions and clustering, and characterizes how those statistics depend on the economic fundamentals. When the value of friends of friends is low, equilibrium networks can be either sparse or thick. But as soon as this value crosses a key threshold, the sparse equilibrium disappears completely and only densely connected networks are possible. This transition mitigates an extreme inefficiency.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/29864
Appears in Collections:NET Institute Working Papers Series

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