On generalized Nash equilibrium in infinite dimension: the Lagrange multipliers approach
DOI10.1080/02331934.2012.747090zbMath1328.91012OpenAlexW2037683468MaRDI QIDQ4981858
Francesca Faraci, Fabio Raciti
Publication date: 20 March 2015
Published in: Optimization (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/02331934.2012.747090
Lagrange multipliersconstraint qualificationgeneralized Nash equilibriumnonlinear constraintsinfinite dimensional spaces
Noncooperative games (91A10) Optimality conditions and duality in mathematical programming (90C46) Variational inequalities (49J40) Complementarity and equilibrium problems and variational inequalities (finite dimensions) (aspects of mathematical programming) (90C33)
Related Items (13)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- A variational inequality model of the spatial price network problem with uncertain data
- Some remarks on the Walras equilibrium problem in Lebesgue spaces
- The infinite dimensional Lagrange multiplier rule for convex optimization problems
- Revisiting some duality theorems via the quasirelative interior in convex optimization
- Remarks on infinite dimensional duality
- Lipschitz continuity results for a class of variational inequalities and applications: A geometric approach
- On general infinite dimensional complementarity problems
- Random equilibrium problems on networks
- Infinite dimensional duality and applications
- Equilibrium conditions and vector variational inequalities: a complex relation
- On generalized Nash games and variational inequalities
- Duality theory for the dynamic oligopolistic market equilibrium problem
- Regularity Conditions via Quasi-Relative Interior in Convex Programming
- A Variational Inequality Formulation of the Dynamic Network User Equilibrium Problem
- On a Class of Random Variational Inequalities on Random Sets
- Existence and Uniqueness of Equilibrium Points for Concave N-Person Games
This page was built for publication: On generalized Nash equilibrium in infinite dimension: the Lagrange multipliers approach