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Title: 1. Introduction: five first lessons
Added: Nov 20, 2008
Author: YaleCourses
Duration: 68:33
Description:
Game Theory (ECON 159)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.00:00 - Chapter 1. What Is Strategy?02:16 - Chapter 2. Strategy: Where Does It Apply?02:54 - Chapter 3. (Administrative Issues)09:40 - Chapter 4. Elements of a Game: Strategies, Actions, Outcomes and Payoffs21:38 - Chapter 5. Strictly Dominant versus Strictly Dominated Strategies29:33 - Chapter 6. Contracts and Collusion33:35 - Chapter 7. The Failure of Collusion and Inefficient Outcomes: Prisoner's Dilemma41:40 - Chapter 8. Coordination Problems01:07:53 - Chapter 9. Lesson RecapComplete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/coursesThis course was recorded in Fall 2007.
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