Yale Open Courses ECON 159: Game Theory
En podcast av William Sheppard
24 Avsnitt
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Lecture 24 - Asymmetric Information: Auctions and the Winner's Curse
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 23 - Asymmetric Information: Silence, Signaling and Suffering Education
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 22 - Repeated Games: Cheating, Punishment, and Outsourcing
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 21 - Repeated Games: Cooperation vs. the End Game
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 20 - Subgame Perfect Equilibrium: Wars of Attrition
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 19 - Subgame Perfect Equilibrium: Matchmaking and Strategic Investments
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 18 - Imperfect Information: Information Sets and Sub-Game Perfection
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 17 - Backward Induction: Ultimatums and Bargaining
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 16 - Backward Induction: Reputation and Duels
Publicerades: 2018-06-08 -
Lecture 15 - Backward Induction: Chess, Strategies, and Credible Threats
Publicerades: 2018-06-06 -
Lecture 14 - Backward Induction: Commitment, Spies, and First-Mover Advantages
Publicerades: 2018-06-06 -
Lecture 13 - Sequential Games: Moral Hazard, Incentives, and Hungry Lions
Publicerades: 2018-06-06 -
Lecture 12 - Evolutionary Stability: Social Convention, Aggression, and Cycles
Publicerades: 2018-06-06 -
Lecture 11 - Evolutionary Stability: Cooperation, Mutation, and Equilibrium
Publicerades: 2018-06-06 -
Lecture 10 - Mixed Strategies in Baseball, Dating and Paying Your Taxes
Publicerades: 2018-06-04 -
Lecture 9 - Mixed Strategies in Theory and Tennis
Publicerades: 2018-06-04 -
Lecture 8 - Nash Equilibrium: Location, Segregation and Randomization
Publicerades: 2018-06-04 -
Lecture 7 - Nash Equilibrium: Shopping, Standing and Voting on a Line
Publicerades: 2018-06-04 -
Lecture 6 - Nash Equilibrium: Dating and Cournot Overview
Publicerades: 2018-06-03 -
Lecture 5 - Nash Equilibrium: Bad Fashion and Bank Runs
Publicerades: 2018-06-03
About the Course This course is an introduction to game theory and strategic thinking. Ideas such as dominance, backward induction, Nash equilibrium, evolutionary stability, commitment, credibility, asymmetric information, adverse selection, and signaling are discussed and applied to games played in class and to examples drawn from economics, politics, the movies, and elsewhere. Course Structure This Yale College course, taught on campus twice per week for 75 minutes, was recorded for Open Yale Courses in Fall 2007. https://oyc.yale.edu/economics/econ-159
