Additive utility

In economics, additive utility is a cardinal utility function with the sigma additivity property.[1]:287288

Additive utility
0
apple5
hat7
apple and hat12

Additivity (also called linearity or modularity) means that "the whole is equal to the sum of its parts." That is, the utility of a set of items is the sum of the utilities of each item separately. Let be a finite set of items. A cardinal utility function , where is the power set of , is additive if for any ,

It follows that for any ,

An additive utility function is characteristic of independent goods. For example, an apple and a hat are considered independent: the utility a person receives from having an apple is the same whether or not he has a hat, and vice versa. A typical utility function for this case is given at the right.

Notes

gollark: I wonder if it's possible to create some kind of anonymized entry swapper.
gollark: It was known that it was Palaiologos's. The collusion was not obvious.
gollark: You can actually use it as a Markov-chain-level model text generator for the input corpus.
gollark: Once no more pairs can be substituted, it uses a large table of the frequencies of each symbol (`qfreqs`) to efficiently encode a sequence of those symbols as a large number, "efficiently".
gollark: Pairs of symbols (initially just the bytes given to the thing) in the input are repeatedly substituted for symbols from the dictionary (the `real_bped` blob).

See also

References

  1. Brandt, Felix; Conitzer, Vincent; Endriss, Ulle; Lang, Jérôme; Procaccia, Ariel D. (2016). Handbook of Computational Social Choice. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107060432. (free online version)
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