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Game theoretic approach for fertilizer application: looking for propensity to cooperate

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 13:24 authored by Sergei Schreider, Panlop Zeephongsekul, Babak AbbasiBabak Abbasi, Matthew Fernandes
This paper continues the research implemented in previous work of (Schreider et al. in Environ. Model. Assess. 15(4):223-238, 2010) where a game theoretic model for optimal fertilizer application in the Hopkins River catchment was formulated, implemented and solved for its optimal strategies. In that work, the authors considered farmers from this catchment as individual players whose objective is to maximize their objective functions which are constituted from two components: economic gain associated with the application of fertilizers which contain phosphorus to the soil and environmental harms associated with this application. The environmental losses are associated with the blue-green algae blooming of the coastal waterways due to phosphorus exported from upstream areas of the catchment. In the previous paper, all agents are considered as rational players and two types of equilibria were considered: fully non-cooperative Nash equilibrium and cooperative Pareto optimum solutions. Among the plethora of Pareto optima, the solution corresponding to the equally weighted individual objective functions were selected. In this paper, the cooperative game approach involving the formation of coalitions and modeling of characteristic value function will be applied and Shapley values for the players obtained. A significant contribution of this approach is the construction of a characteristic function which incorporates both the Nash and Pareto equilibria, showing that it is superadditive. It will be shown that this approach will allow each players to obtain payoffs which strictly dominate their payoffs obtained from their Nash equilibria.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1007/s10479-013-1381-9
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 02545330

Journal

Annals of Operations Research

Volume

206

Issue

1

Start page

385

End page

400

Total pages

16

Publisher

Springer

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 Springer Science+Business Media New York.

Former Identifier

2006041225

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-08-12

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