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Emergent coordination in temporal partitioning congestion games

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  • Reuven Cohen
  • Oren Perez

Abstract

In this article we study the social dynamic of temporal partitioning congestion games (TPGs), in which participants must coordinate an optimal time-partitioning for using a limited resource. The challenge in TPGs lies in determining whether users can optimally self-organize their usage patterns. Reaching an optimal solution may be undermined, however, by a collectively destructive meta-reasoning pattern, trapping users in a socially vicious oscillatory behavior. TPGs constitute a dilemma for both human and animal communities. We developed a model capturing the dynamics of these games and ran simulations to assess its behavior, based on a 2×2 framework that distinguishes between the players’ knowledge of other players’ choices and whether they use a learning mechanism. We found that the only way in which an oscillatory dynamic can be thwarted is by adding learning, which leads to weak convergence in the no-information condition and to strong convergence in the with-information condition. We corroborated the validity of our model using real data from a study of bats’ behaviour in an environment of water scarcity. We conclude by examining the merits of a complexity-based, agent-based modelling approach over a game-theoretic one, contending that it offers superior insights into the temporal dynamics of TPGs. We also briefly discuss the policy implications of our findings.

Suggested Citation

  • Reuven Cohen & Oren Perez, 2024. "Emergent coordination in temporal partitioning congestion games," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 19(8), pages 1-17, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0308341
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308341
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    References listed on IDEAS

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