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Game Theory Lecture Notes
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COMM374 Security Markets Tan Wang, University of British Columbia This course focuses on efficient market theory specifically in the security markets. The course analyzes the accuracy of the statement "stock prices reflect all available information," and the predictability of stock returns.
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Introduction to Game Theory John Duffy, University of Pittsburgh This course is an introduction to game theory, the study of strategic behavior among parties having opposed, mixed or similar interests. This course will sharpen your understanding of strategic behavior in encounters with other individuals--modeled as games--and as a participant in broader markets involving many individuals, recognize and model strategic situations, predict when and how actions will influence the decisions of others and exploit strategic situations for your own benefit.
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Econ 208: Behavioral Game Theory Vincent Crawford, University of California, San Diego Behavioral game theory is a blend of theory and empirical regularities used to analyze economic, political, and social
interactions. It presents the issues addressed by behavioral decision theory, plus some that are specific to multi-person settings: preference interdependence (as in altruism, envy,reciprocity, or spite); and players’ mental models of other players. Here the course narrows the focus to, taking behavior as rational in the decision-theoretic sense and self- interested.
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Economics 200C: Games and Information Vincent Crawford, University of California, San Diego Economics 200C: Games and Information concludes the microeconomics core. It provides an
introduction to noncooperative game theory, developing methods for analyzing how people make
decisions when their consequences are influenced by other peoples' decisions, and showing how to
use those methods to analyze strategic and informational questions in microeconomics.
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Game Theory and Business Strategy Mike Shor, Vanderbilt University This course covers game theory and its applications in business strategy.
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ECON 14.126: Game Theory Drew Fudenberg (Harvard), Sergei Izmalkov (MIT), MIT Game theory course with readings including: repeated games; reputation effects and repeated signaling; knowledge, common knowledge, almost common knowledge, and rational play; learning in strategic-form games; myopic adjustment with persistent randomness; learning in extensive-form games; auctions and mechanism design; supermodular games.
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Varsity Notes is the world's largest directory of free lecture notes, containing free game theory lecture notes and free lecture notes for numerous other academic disciplines. Our free economics course notes will help you succeed in any undergraduate or gradute game theory course at your college or university. Free cheat notes in game theory are also valuable as a self study tool for high school and college students or anyone searching for free resources on economics. |
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