Week 3 - Simultaneous move games with discrete strategies Flashcards

1
Q

True or false: Sequential games are classified as simultaneous is the other player doesn’t know the move of player 1.

A

True e.g. sealed auction bids

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2
Q

What is the difference between pure and mixed strategy?

A

A pure strategy is when you play a move with complete certainty, A mixed strategy is when you choose several actions with probabilities.

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3
Q

What is a solution concept?

A

Prediction about which strategy profiles will be played in a game

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4
Q

What are the 3 solution concepts (weakest first)

A
  1. Players should not choose strategies that are always dominated by another strategy
  2. Players should not choose a strategy that is never a best response to any strategy of the opponent
  3. Players should not choose strategies that are never best responses to each other (NE)(
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5
Q

Strategy X strictly dominates strategy Y if…

A

regardless of what the other player does, it generates a strictly higher payoff than Y for all possible strategy profiles of the other players

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6
Q

Strategy X weakly dominates strategy Y if…

A

regardless of what the other player does, X generates a higher or same payoff than Y for all possible strategy profiles of the other players

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7
Q

What is the difference between a strategy and a strategy profile?

A

A strategy is the move which can have multiple outcomes depending on what the other player plays. A profile is the mix of your strategy and the other players strategy (a single square on a game table)

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8
Q

How do you carry out iterated elimination of strictly dominated strategies

A
  1. For each players, remove all strictly dominated strategies
  2. Check if any additional strategies become strictly dominated and remove any.
  3. Repeat until no more can be eliminated
    4.
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9
Q

When is a game dominance solvable?

A

If only 1 strategy profile remains.

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10
Q

How do we expect people to get to this IESDS strategy solution? (3)

A
  1. Common knowledge of rationality
  2. Learning in a repeated game (more reasonable explanation)
  3. Gene selection in an evolutionary process
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11
Q

What do we assume of players which are rational? (3)

A
  1. Consistent ranking of all outcomes in that game
  2. Play the strategy that maximises utility
  3. unlimited cognitive abilities
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12
Q

Explain how the common knowledge of rationality will lead to an IESDS strategy solution?

A

Player 2 knows that you won’t play X because you’re rational, you know that player 2 won’t play Y because he’s rational etc. Everyone knows that everyone is rational.

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13
Q

When is strategy X a better response to strategy Y?

A

If X generates a weakly higher payoff than any other strategy

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14
Q

True or false: All IESDS solutions are rationalizable?

A

True

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15
Q

How do you find a rationalizable strategy profile?

A
  1. Circle all the best responses
  2. eliminate strategies that are never a best response and repeat
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16
Q

True or false: All rationalizable solutions can be obtained through IESDS?

A

False.