Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
“Signal-jamming” leads to “minimum differentiation” under demand uncertainty
Abstract This paper analyzes the location equilibrium when three firms choose a location sequentially under demand uncertainty in spatial competition. If subsequently entering firms can predict new information concerning demand by observing the demand signal that arises after preceding firms enter the market, then the three firms choose the same location at the midpoint of the expected demand; this is known as “minimum differentiation.” The reason for this is that preceding firms behave in a manner such that subsequent firms cannot predict the exact demand. This behavior of firms might present a new interpretation of “mimic behavior.”
“Signal-jamming” leads to “minimum differentiation” under demand uncertainty
Abstract This paper analyzes the location equilibrium when three firms choose a location sequentially under demand uncertainty in spatial competition. If subsequently entering firms can predict new information concerning demand by observing the demand signal that arises after preceding firms enter the market, then the three firms choose the same location at the midpoint of the expected demand; this is known as “minimum differentiation.” The reason for this is that preceding firms behave in a manner such that subsequent firms cannot predict the exact demand. This behavior of firms might present a new interpretation of “mimic behavior.”
“Signal-jamming” leads to “minimum differentiation” under demand uncertainty
Aiura, Hiroshi (Autor:in)
2008
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Englisch
“Signal-jamming” leads to “minimum differentiation” under demand uncertainty
Online Contents | 2008
|Predicting Flight Demand under Uncertainty
Springer Verlag | 2020
|Löschian competition under demand uncertainty
Online Contents | 2009
|CA CFAR Radar Signal Detection in Pulse Jamming
British Library Online Contents | 1996
|Evaluation with Traffic Assignment Under Demand Uncertainty
British Library Online Contents | 2001
|