English

Bi-capacities -- Part I: definition, M\"obius transform and interaction

Discrete Mathematics 2007-11-15 v1 Computer Science and Game Theory

Abstract

Bi-capacities arise as a natural generalization of capacities (or fuzzy measures) in a context of decision making where underlying scales are bipolar. They are able to capture a wide variety of decision behaviours, encompassing models such as Cumulative Prospect Theory (CPT). The aim of this paper in two parts is to present the machinery behind bi-capacities, and thus remains on a rather theoretical level, although some parts are firmly rooted in decision theory, notably cooperative game theory. The present first part is devoted to the introduction of bi-capacities and the structure on which they are defined. We define the M\"obius transform of bi-capacities, by just applying the well known theory of M\" obius functions as established by Rota to the particular case of bi-capacities. Then, we introduce derivatives of bi-capacities, by analogy with what was done for pseudo-Boolean functions (another view of capacities and set functions), and this is the key point to introduce the Shapley value and the interaction index for bi-capacities. This is done in a cooperative game theoretic perspective. In summary, all familiar notions used for fuzzy measures are available in this more general framework.

Cite

@article{arxiv.0711.2114,
  title  = {Bi-capacities -- Part I: definition, M\"obius transform and interaction},
  author = {Michel Grabisch and Christophe Labreuche},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0711.2114},
  year   = {2007}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:43:10.746Z