Watch the SECC Premiere of Open Yale Courses: Game Theory
this June on Comcast 15 | CCI 21
This course from Yale Open Courses 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.
1: Introduction – First Five Lessons
We introduce Game Theory by playing a game. We organize the game into players, their strategies, and their goals or payoffs; and we learn that we should decide what our goals are before we make choices. With some plausible payoffs, our game is a prisoners’ dilemma. We learn that we should never choose a dominated strategy; but that rational play by rational players can lead to bad outcomes. We discuss some prisoners’ dilemmas in the real world and some possible real-world remedies. With other plausible payoffs, our game is a coordination problem and has very different outcomes: so different payoffs matter. We often need to think, not only about our own payoffs, but also others’ payoffs. We should put ourselves in others’ shoes and try to predict what they will do. This is the essence of strategic thinking.
- Monday, June 19 at 4:00 pm
- Wednesday, June 21 at 7:30 pm
2: Putting Yourselves into Other People’s Shoes
At the start of the lecture, we introduce the “formal ingredients” of a game: the players, their strategies and their payoffs. Then we return to the main lessons from last time: not playing a dominated strategy; and putting ourselves into others’ shoes. We apply these first to defending the Roman Empire against Hannibal; and then to picking a number in the game from last time. We learn that, when you put yourself in someone else’s shoes, you should consider not only their goals, but also how sophisticated are they (are they rational?), and how much do they know about you (do they know that you are rational?). We introduce a new idea: the iterative deletion of dominated strategies. Finally, we discuss the difference between something being known and it being commonly known.
- Monday, June 26 at 4:00 pm
- Wednesday, June 28 at 7:30 pm
More about the course: oyc.yale.edu/economics/econ-159
More about Yale Open Courses: oyc.yale.edu/
Ben Polak, Game Theory (Yale University: Open Yale Courses), http://oyc.yale.edu (Accessed June 1, 2017). License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA