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2007 | Buch

Fuzzy Choice Functions

A Revealed Preference Approach

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A main topic in welfare economics is the rational behaviour of a consumer when, faced with various prices and incomes, he has to make a choice. The theory of consumption establishes the framework in which the rationality of consumers is de?ned and the principle on which it is based. By [109], “the rationality of a consumer may be described by postulating that a consumer has a de?nite preference over all conceivable commodity bundles and that he chooses those commodity bundles that are optimal with respect to his preference subject to budgetary constraints”. Samuelson’s theory of revealed preference expresses the rationality of a consumer in terms of some preference relation associated with a demand fu- tion. The foundation of this theory is built on The Weak Axiom of Consumer Behavior [87] and on The Strong Axiom of Consumer Behavior [63]. The s- ond axiom assures that the demand function can be reconstructed from a revealed preference relation. To make a rational choice is a more general problem that goes beyond the theme of consumer. In economics, social life, medicine, psychology, etc. there are several cases when an agent has to make rational decisions. For instance, when the members of a society vote di?erent candidates in an election, a plausible hypothesis is that, having a desideratum, each of them is rational in the act of choice.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Introduction
Abstract
A main topic in welfare economics is the rational behaviour of a consumer when, faced with various prices and incomes, he has to make a choice. The theory of consumption establishes the framework in which the rationality of consumers is defined and the principle on which it is based. By [109], “the rationality of a consumer may be described by postulating that a consumer has a definite preference over all conceivable commodity bundles and that he chooses those commodity bundles that are optimal with respect to his preference subject to budgetary constraints”.
Irina Georgescu
2. Preliminaries
Abstract
This chapter consists of two sections. The First section contains some examples of choice problems (consumption theory, voting theory etc.). In the second section some fundamental ideas of the revealed preference theory and some moments in its development are presented.
Irina Georgescu
3. Classical Revealed Preference Theory
Abstract
In the previous chapter we sketched out some historical moments of the revealed preference theory from its analytical form in consumption theory to the axiomatic treatment in the abstract context of the choice functions. We also discussed some of the main ideas of this theory. Starting from them, this chapter is a short overview of the revealed preference theory in a mathematical language.
Irina Georgescu
4. Fuzzy Preference Relations
Abstract
This chapter is devoted to the study of fuzzy relations, a mathematical concept which models fuzzy relations. The first section presents the definition of fuzzy sets and fuzzy relations together with a short discussion on their significance. Section 4.2 studies the continuous t-norms and the residuated structure induced by the real interval [0, 1]. In Section 4.3 there are defined operations with fuzzy sets and fuzzy relations, while Section 4.4 deals with the main properties of fuzzy relations and the associated indicators. The last section of the chapter deals with a fuzzy version of a theorem belonging to Szpilrajn. This result will be used in Chapter 7 for a fuzzy approach of a Richter theorem in classical consumer theory.
Irina Georgescu
5. Fuzzy Choice Functions
Abstract
The economic and social life is governed by complex phenomena, that might have exact and/or vague components.
Irina Georgescu
6. Fuzzy Revealed Preference and Consistency Conditions
Abstract
In Chapter 5 we formulated the following axioms: WAFRP (Weak Axiom of Fuzzy Revealed Preference) SAFRP (Strong Axiom of Fuzzy Revealed Preference) WFCA (Weak Fuzzy Congruence Axiom) SFCA (Strong Fuzzy Congruence Axiom)
Irina Georgescu
7. General Results
Abstract
In the previous chapter we studied under hypotheses (H1) and (H2) revealed preference axioms WAFRP, SAFRP, congruence axioms WFCA, SFCA and some consistency conditions. This line of enquiry follows Uzawa-Arrow-Sen theory that starts from the assumption that the domain of the choice function contains the finite sets of alternatives.
Irina Georgescu
8. Degree of Dominance
Abstract
In the literature of fuzzy preference relations there are several ways to define the dominance (see [40], [69], [86]). In general the dominance is related to a fuzzy preference relation. For a fuzzy preference relation there exist a lot of ways to define the degree of dominance of an alternative [14], [15], [16], [17], [40], [69], [79], [86].
Irina Georgescu
9. Similarity and Rationality Indicators for Fuzzy Choice Functions
Abstract
Similarity relations were introduced by Zadeh [118] as fuzzy generalizations of equivalence relations. The notion of similarity relation was extended by Trillas and Valverde [107] for an arbitrary t-norm. In the literature on the similarity relations different notions are used for the same notion: likeness relation, indistinguishability relation, fuzzy equality, etc. (see [68], p. 254).
Irina Georgescu
10. Applications
Abstract
In making a choice, a set of alternatives and a set of criteria are usually needed. According to [119], the alternatives and the criteria are de.ned as follows:
Irina Georgescu
11. Concluding Remarks
Abstract
According to [3] pp. 1-2, the general (crisp) choice theory has three main sources:
Irina Georgescu
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Fuzzy Choice Functions
verfasst von
Irina Georgescu, Dr.
Copyright-Jahr
2007
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Electronic ISBN
978-3-540-68998-0
Print ISBN
978-3-540-68997-3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-68998-0

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