A Stochastic Maximum Principle for a Stochastic Differential Game of a Mean-Field Type |
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Authors: | John Joseph Absalom Hosking |
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Affiliation: | 1. Project-Team MATHFI, Inria Paris-Rocquencourt, Domaine de Voluceau, Rocquencourt, B.P. 105, 78153, Le Chesnay Cedex, France 2. Centre of Mathematics for Applications (CMA), University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1053, Blindern, 0316, Oslo, Norway
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Abstract: | We construct a stochastic maximum principle (SMP) which provides necessary conditions for the existence of Nash equilibria in a certain form of N-agent stochastic differential game (SDG) of a mean-field type. The information structure considered for the SDG is of a possible asymmetric and partial type. To prove our SMP we take an approach based on spike-variations and adjoint representation techniques, analogous to that of S.?Peng (SIAM J. Control Optim. 28(4):966?C979, 1990) in the optimal stochastic control context. In our proof we apply adjoint representation procedures at three points. The first-order adjoint processes are defined as solutions to certain mean-field backward stochastic differential equations, and second-order adjoint processes of a first type are defined as solutions to certain backward stochastic differential equations. Second-order adjoint processes of a second type are defined as solutions of certain backward stochastic equations of a type that we introduce in this paper, and which we term conditional mean-field backward stochastic differential equations. From the resulting representations, we show that the terms relating to these second-order adjoint processes of the second type are of an order such that they do not appear in our final SMP equations. A?comparable situation exists in an article by R.?Buckdahn, B.?Djehiche, and J.?Li (Appl. Math. Optim. 64(2):197?C216, 2011) that constructs a SMP for a mean-field type optimal stochastic control problem; however, the approach we take of using these second-order adjoint processes of a second type to deal with the type of terms that we refer to as the second form of quadratic-type terms represents an alternative to a development, to our setting, of the approach used in their article for their analogous type of term. |
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