Game Theory

provide online training of Game Theory

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Created by coursera instructor Last updated Tue, 08-Feb-2022 English


Game Theory free videos and free material uploaded by coursera instructor .

Syllabus / What will i learn?

Week 1: Introduction and Overview

Introduction, overview, uses of game theory, some applications and examples, and formal definitions of: the normal form, payoffs, strategies, pure strategy Nash equilibrium, dominant strategies

Week 2: Mixed-Strategy Nash Equilibrium

pure and mixed strategy Nash equilibria

Week 3: Alternate Solution Concepts

Iterative removal of strictly dominated strategies, minimax strategies and the minimax theorem for zero-sum game, correlated equilibria

Week 4: Extensive-Form Games

Perfect information games: trees, players assigned to nodes, payoffs, backward Induction, subgame perfect equilibrium, introduction to imperfect-information games, mixed versus behavioral strategies.

Week 5: Repeated Games

Repeated prisoners dilemma, finite and infinite repeated games, limited-average versus future-discounted reward, folk theorems, stochastic games and learning.

Week 6: Bayesian Games

General definitions, ex ante/interim Bayesian Nash equilibrium.

Week 7: Coalitional Games

Transferable utility cooperative games, Shapley value, Core, applications.

Week 8: Final Exam

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Curriculum for this course
0 Lessons 00:00:00 Hours
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Description

Popularized by movies such as "A Beautiful Mind," game theory is the mathematical modeling of strategic interaction among rational (and irrational) agents. Beyond what we call `games' in common language, such as chess, poker, soccer, etc., it includes the modeling of conflict among nations, political campaigns, competition among firms, and trading behavior in markets such as the NYSE. How could you begin to model keyword auctions, and peer to peer file-sharing networks, without accounting for the incentives of the people using them? The course will provide the basics: representing games and strategies, the extensive form (which computer scientists call game trees), Bayesian games (modeling things like auctions), repeated and stochastic games, and more. We'll include a variety of examples including classic games and a few applications.

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Free

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