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On Game-Theoretic Risk Management (Part One) -- Towards a Theory of Games with Payoffs that are Probability-Distributions

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  • Stefan Rass

Abstract

Optimal behavior in (competitive) situation is traditionally determined with the help of utility functions that measure the payoff of different actions. Given an ordering on the space of revenues (payoffs), the classical axiomatic approach of von Neumann and Morgenstern establishes the existence of suitable utility functions, and yields to game-theory as the most prominent materialization of a theory to determine optimal behavior. Although this appears to be a most natural approach to risk management too, applications in critical infrastructures often violate the implicit assumption of actions leading to deterministic consequences. In that sense, the gameplay in a critical infrastructure risk control competition is intrinsically random in the sense of actions having uncertain consequences. Mathematically, this takes us to utility functions that are probability-distribution-valued, in which case we loose the canonic (in fact every possible) ordering on the space of payoffs, and the original techniques of von Neumann and Morgenstern no longer apply. This work introduces a new kind of game in which uncertainty applies to the payoff functions rather than the player's actions (a setting that has been widely studied in the literature, yielding to celebrated notions like the trembling hands equilibrium or the purification theorem). In detail, we show how to fix the non-existence of a (canonic) ordering on the space of probability distributions by only mildly restricting the full set to a subset that can be totally ordered. Our vehicle to define the ordering and establish basic game-theory is non-standard analysis and hyperreal numbers.

Suggested Citation

  • Stefan Rass, 2015. "On Game-Theoretic Risk Management (Part One) -- Towards a Theory of Games with Payoffs that are Probability-Distributions," Papers 1506.07368, arXiv.org, revised Apr 2020.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1506.07368
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Drew Fudenberg & Jean Tirole, 1991. "Game Theory," MIT Press Books, The MIT Press, edition 1, volume 1, number 0262061414, April.
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    Cited by:

    1. Stefan Rass & Sandra König & Stefan Schauer, 2016. "Decisions with Uncertain Consequences—A Total Ordering on Loss-Distributions," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(12), pages 1-23, December.
    2. Schauer, Stefan & Stamer, Martin & Bosse, Claudia & Pavlidis, Michalis & Mouratidis, Haralambos & König, Sandra & Papastergiou, Spyros, 2017. "An adaptive supply chain cyber risk management methodology," Chapters from the Proceedings of the Hamburg International Conference of Logistics (HICL), in: Kersten, Wolfgang & Blecker, Thorsten & Ringle, Christian M. (ed.), Digitalization in Supply Chain Management and Logistics: Smart and Digital Solutions for an Industry 4.0 Environment. Proceedings of the Hamburg Inter, volume 23, pages 405-425, Hamburg University of Technology (TUHH), Institute of Business Logistics and General Management.
    3. Stefan Rass, 2017. "On Game-Theoretic Risk Management (Part Three) - Modeling and Applications," Papers 1711.00708, arXiv.org.

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