A New Procedure to Calculate the Owen Value
Jos
´
e Miguel Gim
´
enez and Mar
´
ıa Albina Puente
Department of Mathematics and Engineering School of Manresa, Technical University of Catalonia, Manresa, Spain
Keywords:
Cooperative Game, Shapley Value, Banzhaf Value, Coalition Structure, Multilinear Extension.
Abstract:
In this paper we focus on games with a coalition structure. Particularly, we deal with the Owen value, the
coalitional value of the Shapley value, and we provide a computational procedure to calculate this coalitional
value in terms of the multilinear extension of the original game.
1 INTRODUCTION
Shapley (Shapley, 1953) (see also (Roth, 1988) and
(Owen, 1995)) initiated the value theory for coopera-
tive games. The Shapley value applies without restric-
tions and provides, for every game, a single payoff
vector to the players. The restriction of the value to
simple games gives rise to the Shapley–Shubik power
index (Shapley and Shubik, 1954), that was axioma-
tized in (Dubey, 1975) introducing the transfer prop-
erty. As a sort of reaction, Banzhaf (Banzhaf, 1965)
proposed a different power index that Owen (Owen,
1975) extended to a dummy–independent and some-
how “normalized” Banzhaf value for all coopera-
tive games. A nice almost common characterization
of the Shapley and Banzhaf values would be given
in (Feltkamp, 1995).
Games with a coalition structure were introduced
in (Aumann and Dr
`
eze, 1974), who extended the
Shapley value to this new framework in such a man-
ner that the game really splits into subgames played
by the unions isolatedly from each other, and every
player receives the payoff allocated by the restric-
tion of the Shapley value to the subgame he is play-
ing within his union. A second approach was used
in (Owen, 1977), when introducing and axiomatically
characterizing his coalitional value (Owen value).
The Owen value is the result of a two–step proce-
dure: first, the unions play a quotient game among
themselves, and each one receives a payoff which, in
turn, is shared among its players in an internal game.
Both payoffs, in the quotient game for unions and
within each union for its players, are given by ap-
plying the Shapley value. Further axiomatizations of
the Owen value have been given in e.g. (Hart and
Kurz, 1983), (Peleg, 1989), (Winter, 1992), (Amer
and Carreras, 1995) and (Amer and Carreras, 2001),
(V
´
azquez et al., 1997), (V
´
azquez, 1998), (Hamiache,
1999), (Hamiache, 2001) and (Albizuri, 2002).
Owen applied the same procedure to the Banzhaf
value and obtained the modified Banzhaf value or
Owen–Banzhaf value (Owen, 1982). In this case
the payoffs at both levels (unions in the quotient
game and players within each union) are given by the
Banzhaf value.
Alonso and Fiestras suggested to modify the two–
step allocation scheme and use the Banzhaf value
for sharing in the quotient game and the Shapley
value within unions. This gave rise to the symmetric
coalitional Banzhaf value or Alonso–Fiestras value
(Alonso and Fiestras, 2002). That same year, Car-
reras et al. considered a sort of “counterpart” of
the Alonso–Fiestras value where the Shapley value
is used in the quotient game and the Banzhaf value
within unions (Amer et al., 2002). Thus, the pos-
sibilities to define a coalitional value by combining
the Shapley and Banzhaf values were complete at that
moment.
In 1972 Owen introduced the multilinear exten-
sion (Owen, 1972) and applied it to the calculus of
the Shapley value. The computing technique based
on the multilinear extension has been applied to
many values: in 1975 to the Banzhaf value (Owen,
1975); in 1992 to the Owen value (Owen and Win-
ter, 1992); in 1994 to the Owen–Banzhaf value (Car-
reras and Maga
˜
na, 1994); in 1997 to the quotient
game (Carreras and Maga
˜
na, 1997); in 2000 to bino-
mial semivalues and to multinomial probabilistic in-
dices (Puente, 2000); in 2004 to the α–decisiveness
and Banzhaf α–indices (Carreras, 2004); in 2005 to
the Alonso–Fiestras value (Alonso et al., 2005); in
2011 to symmetric coalitional binomial semivalues
228
GimÃl’nez J. and Puente M.
A New Procedure to Calculate the Owen Value.
DOI: 10.5220/0006113702280233
In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Operations Research and Enterprise Systems (ICORES 2017), pages 228-233
ISBN: 978-989-758-218-9
Copyright
c
2017 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
(Carreras and Puente, 2011); in 2011 to semival-
ues (Carreras and Gim
´
enez, 2011); in 2015 to coali-
tional multinomial probabilistic values (Carreras and
Puente, 2015).
The present paper focus on giving a new computa-
tional procedure for the Owen value by means of the
multilinear extension of the game.
The organization of the paper is as follows. In
Section 2, a minimum of preliminaries is provided.
Section 3 is devoted to give a procedure to compute
the Owen value.
2 PRELIMINARIES
2.1 Cooperative Games
Let N be a finite set of players and 2
N
be the set of
its coalitions (subsets of N). A cooperative game on
N is a function v : 2
N
R, that assigns a real number
v(S) to each coalition S N, with v(
/
0) = 0. A game v
is monotonic if v(S) v(T ) whenever S T N and
simple if, moreover, v(S) = 0 or 1 for every S N.
A player i N is a dummy in v if v(S {i}) = v(S) +
v({i}) for all S N\{i}, and null in v if, moreover,
v({i}) = 0. Two players i, j N are symmetric in v
if v(S {i}) = v(S { j}) for all S N\{i, j}. Given
a nonempty coalition T N, the restriction to T of a
given game v on N is the game v
|T
on T that we will
call a subgame of v and is defined by v
|T
(S) = v(S)
for all S T .
Endowed with the natural operations for real–
valued functions, i.e. v + v
0
and λv for all λ R, the
set of all cooperative games on N is a vector space
G
N
. For every nonempty coalition T N, the una-
nimity game u
T
is defined by u
T
(S) = 1 if T S and
u
T
(S) = 0 otherwise, and it is easily checked that the
set of all unanimity games is a basis for G
N
, so that
dim(G
N
) = 2
n
1 if n = |N|.
By a value on G
N
we will mean a map f : G
N
R
N
, that assigns to every game v a vector f [v] with
components f
i
[v] for all i N.
Well known example of value is the Shapley value
ϕ (Shapley (Shapley, 1953)), defined as
ϕ
i
[v] =
SN\{i}
p
s
[v(S {i}) v(S)
for all i N, v G
N
, where s = |S| and p
s
= 1/n
n1
s
.
Notice that this value is defined for each N. In fact,
it is defined on cardinalities rather than on specific
player sets: this means the weighting vector {p
s
}
n1
s=0
defines the Shapley value on all N such that n = |N|.
When necessary, we shall write ϕ
(n)
for the Shapley
value on cardinality n and p
n
s
for its weighting coef-
ficients. ϕ
(n)
induces values ϕ
(t)
for all cardinalities
t < n, recurrently defined by the Pascal triangle (in-
verse) formula given by Dragan (Dragan, 1997). That
is
p
t
s
= p
t+1
s
+ p
t+1
s+1
for 0 s < t, (1)
The multilinear extension (Owen, 1972) of a
game v G
N
is the real–valued function defined on
R
N
by
f
v
(X
N
) =
SN
iS
x
i
jN\S
(1 x
j
)v(S). (2)
where X
N
denotes the set of variables x
i
for i N.
As is well known, both the Shapley and Banzhaf
values of any game v can be easily obtained from its
multilinear extension. Indeed, ϕ[v] can be calculated
by integrating the partial derivatives of the multilin-
ear extension of the game along the main diagonal
x
1
= x
2
= · ·· = x
n
of the cube [0,1]
N
(Owen, 1972)),
while the partial derivatives of that multilinear exten-
sion evaluated at point (1/2, 1/2,.. .,1/2) give β[v]
(Owen, 1975).
2.2 Games with Coalition Structure
Given N = {1,2,...,n}, we will denote by B(N) the
set of all partitions of N. Each B B(N) is called
a coalition structure in N, and a union each member
of B. The so–called trivial coalition structures are
B
n
= {{1},{2}, ... ,{n}} (individual coalitions) and
B
N
= {N} (grand coalition). A cooperative game with
a coalition structure is a pair [v;B], where v G
N
and B B(N) for a given N. Each partition B gives
a pattern of cooperation among players. We denote
by G
cs
N
= G
N
× B(N) the set of all cooperative games
with a coalition structure and player set N.
If [v;B] G
cs
N
and B = {B
1
,B
2
,.. .,B
m
}, the quo-
tient game v
B
is the cooperative game played by the
unions or, rather, by the quotient set M = {1, 2,.. .,m}
of their representatives, as follows:
v
B
(R) = v(
[
rR
B
r
) for all R M.
By a coalitional value on G
cs
N
we will mean a map
g : G
cs
N
R
N
, which assigns to every pair [v; B] a vec-
tor g[v;B] with components g
i
[v;B] for each i N.
If f is a value on G
N
and g is a coalitional value
on G
cs
N
, it is said that g is a coalitional value of f iff
g[v;B
n
] = f [v] for all v G
N
.
A New Procedure to Calculate the Owen Value
229
2.2.1 The Owen Value
The Owen value (Owen (Owen, 1977)) is the coali-
tional value Φ defined by
Φ
i
[v;P] =
RM\{k}
T B
k
\{i}
p
m1
r
p
b
k
1
t
[v(Q T {i}) v(Q T )]
for all i N and [v; B] G
cs
N
, where B
k
B is the union
such that i B
k
, Q =
S
rR
B
r
and
p
m1
r
=
1
m
1
m1
r
, p
b
k
1
t
=
1
b
k
1
b
k
1
t
.
This coalitional value was axiomatically charac-
terized by Owen (Owen, 1977) as the only coalitional
value that satisfies the following properties: the natu-
ral extensions to this framework of
efficiency
additivity
the dummy player property
and also
symmetry within unions: if i, j B
k
are symmet-
ric in v then
Φ
i
[v;B] = Φ
j
[v;B]
symmetry in the quotient game: if B
r
,B
s
P are
symmetric in [v;B] then
iB
r
Φ
i
[v;B] =
jB
s
Φ
j
[v;B].
Finally, as Φ is defined for any N, the following
property makes sense and is also satisfied:
quotient game property: for all [v; B] G
cs
N
,
iB
k
Φ
i
[v;B] = Φ
k
[v
B
;B
m
] for all B
k
B.
The Owen value can be viewed as a two–step al-
location rule. First, each union B
k
receives its payoff
in the quotient game according to the Shapley value;
then, each B
k
splits this amount among its players by
applying the Shapley value to a game played in B
k
as follows: the worth of each subcoalition T of B
k
is
the Shapley value that T would get in a “pseudoquo-
tient game” played by T and the remaining unions on
the assumption that B
k
\T leaves the game, i.e. the
quotient game after replacing B
k
with T . This is the
way to bargain within the union: each subcoalition T
claims the payoff it would obtain when dealing with
the other unions in absence of its partners in B
k
.
The Owen value is a coalitional value of the Shap-
ley value ϕ in the sense that Φ[v; B
n
] = ϕ[v] for all
v G
N
. Besides, Φ[v; B
N
] = ϕ[v].
3 A COMPUTATIONAL
PROCEDURE TO CALCULATE
THE OWEN VALUE
In this section we present a new computational proce-
dure to calculate this coalitional value. Before that,
we need two previous results that will be given in
Lemma 3.1 and Proposition 3.2.
Lemma 3.1. Let [v; B] G
cs
N
, B = {B
1
,B
2
,.. .,B
m
} a
coalition structure in N. The allocations given by Φ
to players belonging to a union B
j
can be obtained as
a linear combination of the allocations to unanimity
games u
T
, where T = V W , V B
j
and W 2
B\B
j
.
.
Proof Each game v G
N
can be uniquely written as
linear combination of unanimity games
v =
T N: T 6=
/
0
α
T
u
T
,
where α
T
= α
T
(v) =
ST
(1)
ts
v(S).
By linearity, for all i B
j
,
Φ
i
[v;B] =
T N: T 6=
/
0
α
T
Φ
i
[u
T
]
and it suffices consider unanimity games u
T
with
T = V A
i
1
A
i
2
... A
i
p
V B
j
, {i
1
,i
2
,...,i
p
} M \ { j}
/
0 6= A
i
q
B
i
q
, q = 1,..., p.
According to the definition of the Owen value it is
easy to check that the allocations to players in B
j
only
depend on the allocations in the unanimity games de-
fined on inside coalitions in B
j
and entire unions out-
side B
j
. That is,
Φ
i
[u
T
;B] = Φ
i
[u
V A
i
1
A
i
2
...A
i
p
;B]
= Φ
i
[u
V B
i
1
B
i
2
...B
i
p
;B].
Notice that the number of unanimity games of this
form is (2
b
j
1)2
m
with b
j
= |B
j
| and m = |M|.
Proposition 3.2. Let B = {B
1
,B
2
,.. .,B
m
} be a coali-
tion structure in N. Fixed a union B
j
, the allocation
to a player i belonging to B
j
in a unanimity game
u
T
, T = V B
i
1
··· B
i
h
, V B
j
and {i
1
,...,i
h
}
M \ { j} is given by
Φ
i
[u
T
;B] =
ψ/ϕ
j
i
[u
T
;B] =
p
h+1
h
p
v
v1
i T
0 i / T
where (p
h+1
s
)
h
s=0
and (p
v
s
)
v1
s=0
are the weighting coef-
ficients of the induced Shapley value and p
h+1
h
=
1
h+1
and p
v
v1
=
1
v
.
ICORES 2017 - 6th International Conference on Operations Research and Enterprise Systems
230
Proof For i T we have
Φ
i
[u
T
;B] =
RM\{ j}
p
m
r
SB
j
\{i}
p
b
j
s
[u
T
(Q S {i}) u
T
(Q S)]
where Q =
[
rR
B
r
, b
j
= |B
j
|, and s = |S|.
Only u
T
(Q S {i}) u
T
(Q S) does not vanish
for coalitions R such that {i
1
,...,i
h
} R M \ { j}
and for coalitions S such that V \ {i} S B
j
\ {i}.
Then,
Φ
i
[u
T
;B] = p
h+1
h
p
v
v1
In case of i 6∈ T , all marginal contributions u
T
(QS
{i}) u
T
(Q S) vanish.
Example 3.1 On the players set N = {1,2,3,4,5,6},
let B = {{1,2,3}, {4,5},{6}} be a coalition structure
on N. We will obtain the allocations to players i B
1
according to Φ for the unanimity games u
{1,2,4,6}
and
u
{1,2,4,5,6}
. They are
Φ
i
[u
{1,2,4,6}
;B] = p
3
2
p
2
1
=
1
3
1
2
=
1
6
, for i = 1,2 and
Φ
3
[u
{1,2,4,6}
;B] = 0,
where p
3
2
=
1
3
and p
2
1
=
1
2
are the corresponding
weighting coefficient of the induced Shapley value.
In a similar way and according to Lemma 3.1, for
u
{1,2,4,5,6}
we obtain
Φ
i
[u
{1,2,4,5,6}
;B] = p
3
2
p
2
1
=
1
3
1
2
=
1
6
, for i = 1,2 and
Φ
3
[u
{1,2,4,5,6}
;B] = 0,
Notice that the allocations in both games are the
same because coalitions {1, 2,4,6} and {1, 2,4,5, 6}
intersect the same unions B
2
and B
3
.
In next theorem we present a new method to com-
pute the Owen value by means of the multilinear ex-
tension of the game.
Theorem 3.3. Let [v; B] G
cs
N
, B = {B
1
,B
2
,.. .,B
m
}
a coalition structure in N.
Then the following steps lead to the Owen value
of any player i B
j
in [v;B].
1. Obtain the multilinear extension f (x
1
,x
2
,.. .,x
n
)
of game v.
2. For every r 6= j and all h B
r
, replace the variable
x
h
with y
r
. This yields a new function of x
k
for
k B
j
and y
r
for r M\{ j}.
3. In this new function, reduce to 1 all higher expo-
nents, i.e. replace with y
r
each y
q
r
such that q > 1.
This gives a new multilinear function denoted as
g
j
((x
k
)
kB
j
, (y
r
)
rM\{ j}
) (The modified multilin-
ear extension of union B
j
).
4. After some calculus, the obtained modified multi-
linear extension reduces to
g
j
((x
k
)
kB
j
, (y
r
)
rM\{ j}
)
=
V B
j
W M\{ j}
λ
V W
kV
x
k
rW
y
r
5. Multiply each product
kV
x
k
by p
j,v
v1
and each
product
rW
y
r
by p
w+1
w
obtaining a new multi-
linear function called g
j
.
6. Obtain the partial derivative of g
j
with respect to
x
i
evaluated at point (1,...,1) and
Φ
i
[v;B] =
g
j
x
i
(1
B
j
,1
M\{ j}
).
Proof Steps 1–3 have been already used in many well
known works to obtain the modified multilinear ex-
tension of union B
j
. Step 4 shows the modified mul-
tilinear extension as a linear combination of multilin-
ear extensions of unanimity games. Step 5 weights
each unanimity game according to Proposition 3.2 so
that step 6 gives as usual the marginal contribution of
player i and his allocation Φ
i
[v;B] is obtained.
Example 3.2 Let v [68; 50,21,20,19,13,9,3] be the
7–person weighted majority game and the coalition
structure B = {{1}, {2,3,5}, {4},{6},{7}}. We will
compute Φ[v;B].
The set of minimal winning coalitions of the game
is
W
m
(v) = {{1,2},{1, 3},{1,4}, {1,5,6}},
so that players 2, 3 and 4 on one hand, and 5 and 6 on
the other, are symmetric in v. Moreover, player 7 is
null and the multilinear extension of v is
f (X
N
) =x
1
x
2
+ x
1
x
3
+ x
1
x
4
x
1
x
2
x
3
x
1
x
2
x
4
x
1
x
3
x
4
+x
1
x
5
x
6
+ x
1
x
2
x
3
x
4
x
1
x
2
x
5
x
6
x
1
x
3
x
5
x
6
x
1
x
4
x
5
x
6
+ x
2
x
3
x
4
x
5
+ x
2
x
3
x
4
x
6
x
1
x
2
x
3
x
4
x
5
x
1
x
2
x
3
x
4
x
6
+ x
1
x
2
x
3
x
5
x
6
+ x
1
x
2
x
4
x
5
x
6
+x
1
x
3
x
4
x
5
x
6
x
2
x
3
x
4
x
5
x
6
.
The coalition structure is
B = {{1},{2,3, 5},{4},{6}, {7}}
and steps 1–4 in Theorem 3.3 give the modified mul-
tilinear extension of each union B
j
, for j = 1,2,3, 4
(notice that player 7 is null in v and it is not necessary
to compute g
5
).
g
1
(x
1
,y
2
,y
3
,y
4
,y
5
) = x
1
y
2
+ x
1
y
3
2x
1
y
2
y
3
+ y
2
y
3
,
A New Procedure to Calculate the Owen Value
231
g
2
(x
2
,x
3
,x
5
,y
1
,y
3
,y
4
,y
5
) = x
2
y
1
+ x
3
y
1
+ y
1
y
3
x
2
x
3
y
1
x
2
y
1
y
3
x
3
y
1
y
3
+ x
5
y
1
y
4
+ x
2
x
3
y
1
y
3
x
2
x
5
y
1
y
4
x
3
x
5
y
1
y
4
x
5
y
1
y
3
y
4
+ x
2
x
3
x
5
y
3
+ x
2
x
3
y
3
y
4
x
2
x
3
x
5
y
1
y
3
x
2
x
3
y
1
y
3
y
4
+ x
2
x
3
x
5
y
1
y
4
+ x
2
x
5
y
1
y
3
y
4
+ x
3
x
5
y
1
y
3
y
4
x
2
x
3
x
5
y
3
y
4
,
g
3
(x
4
,y
1
,y
2
,y
4
,y
5
) = y
1
y
2
+ x
4
y
1
+ x
4
y
2
2x
4
y
1
y
2
,
g
4
(x
6
,y
1
,y
2
,y
3
,y
5
) = y
1
y
2
+ y
1
y
3
+ y
2
y
3
2y
1
y
2
y
3
.
Step 5 leads to g
j
for each j = 1,2,3, 4.
g
1
(x
1
,y
2
,y
3
,y
4
,y
5
) = p
1,1
0
p
2
1
x
1
y
2
+ p
1,1
0
p
2
1
x
1
y
3
2p
1,1
0
p
3
2
x
1
y
2
y
3
+ p
3
2
y
2
y
3
,
g
2
(x
2
,x
3
,x
5
,y
1
,y
3
,y
4
,y
5
) =
p
1
0
p
2
1
x
2
y
1
+ p
1
0
p
2
1
x
3
y
1
p
2
1
p
2
1
x
2
x
3
y
1
+ p
3
2
y
1
y
3
p
1
0
p
3
2
x
2
y
1
y
3
p
1
0
p
3
2
x
3
y
1
y
3
+ p
1
0
p
3
2
x
5
y
1
y
4
+ p
2
1
p
3
2
x
2
x
3
y
1
y
3
p
2
1
p
3
2
x
2
x
5
y
1
y
4
p
2
1
p
3
2
x
3
x
5
y
1
y
4
p
1
0
p
4
3
x
5
y
1
y
3
y
4
+ p
3
2
p
2
1
x
2
x
3
x
5
y
3
+ p
2
1
p
3
2
x
2
x
3
y
3
y
4
p
3
2
p
3
2
x
2
x
3
x
5
y
1
y
3
p
2
1
p
4
3
x
2
x
3
y
1
y
3
y
4
+ p
3
2
p
3
2
x
2
x
3
x
5
y
1
y
4
+ p
2
1
p
4
3
x
2
x
5
y
1
y
3
y
4
+ p
2
1
p
4
3
x
3
x
5
y
1
y
3
y
4
p
3
2
p
3
2
x
2
x
3
x
5
y
3
y
4
,
g
3
(x
4
,y
1
,y
2
,y
4
,y
5
) = p
3
2
y
1
y
2
+ p
1
0
q
2
1
x
4
y
1
+ p
1
0
p
2
1
x
4
y
2
2p
1
0
p
3
2
x
4
y
1
y
2
,
g
4
(x
6
,y
1
,y
2
,y
3
,y
5
) = p
3
2
y
1
y
2
+ p
3
2
y
1
y
3
+ p
3
2
y
2
y
3
2p
4
3
y
1
y
2
y
3
.
Finally, step 6 yields
m
Φ
1
[v;B] = 2p
1
0
p
2
1
2p
1
0
p
3
2
=
1
3
,
m
Φ
i
[v;B] = p
1
0
p
2
1
p
2
1
p
2
1
p
1
0
p
3
2
+ p
2
1
p
3
2
+ p
3
2
p
2
1
p
3
2
p
3
2
=
5
36
, for i = 2,3,
m
Φ
4
[v;B] = 2p
1
0
p
2
1
2p
1
0
p
3
2
=
1
3
,
m
Φ
5
[v;B] = p
1
0
p
3
2
2p
2
1
p
3
2
p
1
0
p
4
3
+ p
3
2
p
2
1
p
3
2
p
3
2
+ 2p
2
1
p
4
3
=
1
18
,
m
Φ
6
[v;B] = 0 and
m
Φ
7
[v;B] = 0.
4 CONCLUSIONS
As we have said before, the present work is focussed
on the calculus of the Owen value. More precisely, the
computation of players’ allocations are obtained from
the multilinear extension of the game. In the con-
text of games with a coalition structure, the multilin-
ear extension technique has been also applied to com-
puting the Owen value in (Owen and Winter, 1992);
as well as the Owen–Banzhaf value in (Carreras and
Maga
˜
na, 1994); in 1997 to the quotient game (Car-
reras and Maga
˜
na, 1997); the Alonso–Fiestras value
in (Alonso et al., 2005); the symmetric coalitional bi-
nomial semivalues in (Carreras and Puente, 2011);
and coalitional multinomial probabilistic values in
(Carreras and Puente, 2015). In all these cases, the
first three steps of the procedure are the same.
Instead, the consideration of the modified MLE
g
j
for the union B
j
obtained from the initial one has
changed the procedure: first, we weight the terms of
g
j
multiplying each product
kV
x
k
by p
v
v1
and each
product
rW
y
r
by q
w+1
w
obtaining a new multilin-
ear function called g
j
. Second, we obtain players’
marginal contributions by partial differentiation of g
j
.
This new procedure has an advantage with respect to
the traditional method: the allocations given by the
Owen value are available since the weighting coeffi-
cients p
k1
k
and q
k+1
k
can be always easily obtained.
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