🎱Game Theory Unit 1 – Game Theory: Strategic Decision-Making
Game theory examines strategic decision-making among rational players. It provides a framework for analyzing conflicts and cooperation in economics, politics, and other fields. Key concepts include players, strategies, payoffs, and information sets.
Nash equilibrium is a central concept, representing stable outcomes where no player can improve by changing strategy unilaterally. Applications range from oligopoly models and auctions to bargaining and mechanism design, offering insights into real-world strategic interactions.
Game theory studies strategic interactions between rational decision-makers
Originated in the work of mathematician John von Neumann and economist Oskar Morgenstern in the 1940s
Assumes players are rational, intelligent, and aim to maximize their own payoffs
Payoffs represent the outcomes or utilities that players receive based on their decisions and the decisions of others
Games can be represented using matrices, trees, or other mathematical structures
Key components of a game include players, strategies, payoffs, and information sets
Provides a framework for analyzing conflicts and cooperation in various domains (economics, political science, psychology)
Key Concepts and Terminology
Players are the decision-makers in a game, which can be individuals, firms, or other entities
Strategies are the possible actions or plans that players can choose from
Pure strategies specify a single action for each decision point
Mixed strategies involve probabilistic combinations of pure strategies
Payoffs are the outcomes or utilities that players receive based on the chosen strategies
Information sets describe the knowledge available to players at each decision point
Perfect information games (chess) have complete knowledge of all previous moves
Imperfect information games (poker) involve uncertainty about other players' actions or private information
Rationality assumes that players make decisions to maximize their expected payoffs
Common knowledge refers to information that all players know, and all players know that all players know, and so on
Types of Games and Their Structures
Static games involve players making decisions simultaneously without knowledge of others' choices
Example: Prisoner's Dilemma, where two suspects must choose to confess or remain silent
Dynamic games involve players making decisions sequentially, with knowledge of previous moves
Example: Stackelberg competition, where a leader firm moves first and a follower firm responds
Cooperative games allow players to form binding agreements and coordinate their strategies
Example: Formation of coalitions in political negotiations
Non-cooperative games do not allow for enforceable agreements between players
Zero-sum games have payoffs that sum to zero, meaning one player's gain is another's loss (matching pennies)
Non-zero-sum games have payoffs that do not necessarily sum to zero, allowing for mutual gains or losses (Battle of the Sexes)
Repeated games involve players interacting over multiple rounds, enabling strategies like tit-for-tat
Nash Equilibrium and Strategic Thinking
Nash equilibrium is a key concept in game theory, representing a stable outcome where no player can improve their payoff by unilaterally changing their strategy
In a Nash equilibrium, each player's strategy is a best response to the strategies of the other players
Nash equilibrium can be pure (players choose a single strategy) or mixed (players randomize over multiple strategies)
Finding Nash equilibria involves analyzing best responses and iterative reasoning
Dominant strategies are optimal regardless of other players' choices
Dominated strategies are always inferior and can be eliminated
Nash equilibrium provides a framework for predicting outcomes and analyzing strategic stability
Multiple Nash equilibria can exist in a game, leading to coordination challenges
Refinements of Nash equilibrium (subgame perfect, perfect Bayesian) address dynamic and informational considerations
Decision-Making Under Uncertainty
Many real-world situations involve uncertainty about payoffs, probabilities, or other players' types
Expected utility theory provides a framework for decision-making under uncertainty
Players assign utilities to outcomes and choose strategies to maximize expected utility
Expected utility is calculated as the sum of utilities weighted by their probabilities
Risk attitudes describe players' preferences for certain vs. uncertain outcomes
Risk-averse players prefer certain outcomes to gambles with the same expected value
Risk-neutral players are indifferent between certain outcomes and gambles with the same expected value
Risk-seeking players prefer gambles to certain outcomes with the same expected value
Bayesian games incorporate incomplete information about players' types or payoffs
Players have prior beliefs about the distribution of types and update beliefs based on observed actions
Information revelation and signaling can occur in games with uncertainty
Players may take actions to reveal or conceal private information strategically
Applications in Economics and Business
Game theory has wide-ranging applications in economics and business, providing insights into market competition, bargaining, auctions, and more
Oligopoly models analyze strategic interactions among firms in markets with few competitors
Bargaining models examine how players divide a surplus or resolve conflicts through negotiation
Rubinstein bargaining model analyzes alternating offers and the role of patience
Nash bargaining solution predicts outcomes based on axioms of fairness and efficiency
Auction theory studies the design and outcomes of different auction formats (first-price, second-price, English, Dutch)
Principal-agent models analyze incentive problems and contract design in situations with asymmetric information (moral hazard, adverse selection)
Matching markets involve the allocation of resources or partnerships based on preferences and stability criteria (stable marriage problem, college admissions)
Advanced Game Theory Techniques
Evolutionary game theory studies the dynamics of strategy adoption and adaptation in populations
Replicator dynamics describe how strategies' frequencies change based on their relative payoffs
Evolutionarily stable strategies (ESS) are robust to invasion by mutant strategies
Cooperative game theory focuses on coalition formation and the distribution of payoffs among players
Shapley value assigns fair payoffs to players based on their marginal contributions to coalitions
Core identifies stable allocations that no coalition can improve upon
Mechanism design aims to create rules and incentives to achieve desired outcomes in strategic settings
Revelation principle states that any equilibrium outcome can be achieved through a direct revelation mechanism
Vickrey-Clarke-Groves (VCG) mechanism ensures truthful reporting and efficient outcomes in certain settings
Behavioral game theory incorporates insights from psychology and experimental evidence
Bounded rationality models relax assumptions of perfect rationality and optimization
Prospect theory captures risk attitudes and reference-dependent preferences
Learning in games examines how players adapt and converge to equilibria over time
Fictitious play assumes players best-respond to the empirical distribution of past actions
Reinforcement learning models update strategies based on their past performance
Real-World Case Studies and Examples
Game theory has been applied to a wide range of real-world situations, providing valuable insights and policy implications
Auction design: Game-theoretic principles have informed the design of spectrum auctions, online advertising auctions, and government procurement auctions
Example: The FCC's spectrum auctions use a simultaneous multiple-round format to allocate licenses efficiently
Bargaining and negotiations: Game theory has been used to analyze international trade negotiations, labor-management disputes, and peace negotiations
Example: The Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt in 1978 involved strategic concessions and issue linkage
Market competition: Game-theoretic models have been applied to analyze pricing strategies, entry decisions, and mergers in various industries
Example: The airline industry exhibits strategic interactions in pricing, route selection, and capacity decisions
Voting and political competition: Game theory has been used to study voting systems, campaign strategies, and coalition formation in political settings
Example: The U.S. presidential election can be modeled as a game between candidates, with strategies focused on key swing states
Environmental and resource management: Game theory has been applied to analyze international environmental agreements, fisheries management, and water resource allocation
Example: The Paris Agreement on climate change involves strategic considerations and incentives for participation and compliance