1 / 42

Game Theory

Game Theory. Topic 3 Sequential Games. “It is true that life must be understood backward, but … it must be lived forward.”. - Søren Kierkegaard. Review. Understanding the outcomes of games Sometimes easy Dominant strategies Sometimes more challenging “I know that you know …”

haruko
Download Presentation

Game Theory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Game Theory Topic 3 Sequential Games “It is true that life must be understood backward, but … it must be lived forward.” - Søren Kierkegaard

  2. Review • Understanding the outcomes of games • Sometimes easy • Dominant strategies • Sometimes more challenging • “I know that you know …” • What if a game is sequential? • Market entry

  3. Very Large Airplanes:Airbus vs. Boeing • Airbus • “ The problem is the monopoly of the 747 … They have a product. We have none. ” - Airbus Executive • Initiated plans to build a super-jumbo jet • Industry feasibility studies: • Room for at most one megaseater • Boeing • “Boeing, the world’s top aircraft maker, announced it was building a plane with 600 to 800 seats, the biggest and most expensive airliner ever.” - BusinessWeek

  4. out out in in Sequential Games The Game $0, $0 out – $1 billion, – $1billion Airbus $0.3 billion, – $3 billion in Boeing – $4 billion, – $4billion

  5. out in Looking Forward … • Airbus makes the first move: • Must consider how Boeing will respond • If stay out: • Boeing stays out $0billion Boeing – $1 billion

  6. out in Looking Forward … • Airbus makes the first move: • Must consider how Boeing will respond • If enter: • Boeing accommodates, stays out – $3billion Boeing – $4 billion

  7. out in … And Reasoning Back • Now consider the first move: • Only ( In, Out ) is sequentially rational • In is not credible (for Boeing) $0, $0 out Airbus $0.3 billion, – $3 billion out Boeing

  8. out out in in What if Boeing Can Profit? The Game $0, $0 out – $1 billion, + $1billion Airbus $0.3 billion, – $3 billion in Boeing – $4 billion, – $4billion

  9. Nash Equilibria Are Deceiving • Two equilibria (game of chicken) • But, still only one is sequentially rational

  10. Airbus vs. Boeing • October 2007 • A380 enters commercial service • Singapore to Sydney • List price: $350 million • September 2011 • Four year anniversary: 12,000,000 seats sold

  11. Solving Sequential Games • Intuitive Approach: • Start at the end and trim the tree to the present • Eliminates non-credible future action

  12. Solving Sequential Games • Steps: • What action will each last player to act take? • Look only at that player’s payoffs • Select the highest • Place an arrow on the selected branch • Delete all other branches • Now, treat the next-to-last player to act as last • Continue in this manner until you reach the root • Equilibrium: the “name” of each arrow

  13. Subgame Perfect Equilibrium • Subgame: • A decision node and all nodes that follow it • Subgame Perfect Equilibrium: (a.k.a. Rollback, Backwards Induction) • The equilibrium specifies an action at every decision node in the game • The equilibrium is also an equilibrium in every subgame

  14. Nash Equilibria Are Deceiving • Does either player have a dominant strategy? • What is the equilibrium? • What if Player 1 goes first? • What if Player 2 goes first?

  15. Solving Sequential Games • Thinking backwards is easy in game trees • Start at the end and trim the tree to the present • Thinking backwards is challenging in practice • Outline: • Strategic moves in early rounds • The rule of three (again) • Seeing the end of the game

  16. Graduation SpeakerRevisited Graduation speaker Ron Paul, Sarah Palin, or Al Gore? • Four committee members prefer: Ron to Sarah to Al ( R > S > A ) • Three committee members prefer: Sarah to Al to Ron ( S > A > R ) • Two committee members prefer: Al to Ron to Sarah ( A > R > S ) • Voting by Majority Rule

  17. Graduation SpeakerRevisited Graduation speaker Ron Paul, Sarah Palin, or Al Gore? • Member preferences: 4 (R>S>A) 3 (S>A>R) 2 (A>R>S) • Majority rule results: • R beats S ; S beats A ; A beats R • Voting results (example): • R beats S then winner versus AA

  18. Voting as a Sequential Game R R vs. A A R R vs. S S S A S vs. A

  19. Looking Forward … B R R vs. A A majority prefers A to R A R S S A majority prefers S to A A S vs. A A

  20. … And Reasoning Back Three committee members prefer R to S to A. How should they vote in the first round? R vs. A A R A R vs. S S S S S vs. A

  21. Sequential Rationality Look forward and reason back. Anticipate what your rivals will do tomorrow in response to your actions today

  22. Importance of Rules • Outcome is still predetermined: • R beats S then winner versus A • R beats A then winner versus S • S beats A then winner versus R

  23. Accommodating a Potential Entrant • Do you enter? • Do you accommodate entry?

  24. Survivor Immunity Challenge • There are 21 flags • Players alternate removing 1, 2, or 3 flags • The player to take the last flag wins

  25. Unraveling give give give give 6, 6 take take take take 2, 1 2, 4 6, 3 3, 9

  26. Unraveling • Equilibrium: take , take ; take , take • Remember: • An equilibrium specifies an action at every decision node • Even those that will not be reached in equilibrium

  27. Sequential Games • You have a monopoly market in every state • There is one potential entrant in each state • They make their entry decisions sequentially • Florida may enter today • New York may enter tomorrow • etc. • Each time, you can accommodate or fight • What do you do the first year?

  28. E3 E2 out out E1 fight fight M in in M acc acc The Game

  29. out $0, $100 + previous E in 50, 50 + previous acc M fight –50, –50 + previous Looking Forward … • In the last period: • No reason to fight final entrant, thus ( In, Accommodate )

  30. … And Reasoning Back • The Incumbent will not fight the last entrant • But then, no reason to fight the previous entrant • … • But then, no reason to fight the first entrant • Only one sequential equilibrium • All entrants play In • Incumbent plays Accommodate • But for long games, this is mostly theoretical • People “see” the end two to three periods out!

  31. Breakfast Cereals A small sampling of the Kellogg’s portfolio

  32. Breakfast Cereals product development costs: $1.2M per product 600 500 400 sales (in thousands) 300 200 100 000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 less sweet more sweet

  33. Breakfast Cereals

  34. Breakfast Cereals 600 500 400 sales (in thousands) 300 200 100 000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 less sweet more sweet

  35. First Product Entry SCENARIO 1 Profit = ½ 5(600) – 1200 = 300 600 500 400 sales (in thousands) 300 200 100 000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 less sweet more sweet

  36. Second Product Entry SCENARIO 2 Profit = 2 x 300 = 600 600 500 400 sales (in thousands) 300 200 100 000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 less sweet more sweet

  37. Third Product Entry SCENARIO 3 Profit = 300 x 3 – 240 x 2 = 420 600 500 400 sales (in thousands) 300 200 100 000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 less sweet more sweet

  38. Competitor Enters SCENARIO 4 Profit = 300 x 2 - 240 = 360 600 500 400 sales (in thousands) 300 200 100 000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 less sweet more sweet

  39. Strategic Voting • We saw that voting strategically rather than honestly can change outcomes • Other examples? • Amendments to make bad bills worse • Crossing over in open primaries • “Centrist” voting in primaries

  40. Strategic Voting • Maybe majority rule causes this. • Can we eliminate “strategic voting” with other rules? • Ranking of all candidates • Proportional representation • Run offs • Etc.

  41. Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem • Consider a voting rule that satisfies: • If everyone prefers A to B, B can’t win • If A beats B and C, then A beats B • The only political procedure that always guarantees the above is a dictator • No voting system avoids strategic voting

  42. Summary • Thinking forward misses opportunities • Make sure to see the game through to the logical end • Don’t expect others to see the end until it is close • The rule of three steps

More Related