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Game theory and international relations1994

preferences, information, and empirical evidence

by Pierre Allan

What is the origin of game preferences and payoffs, how are they aggregated and what are the implications of interdependent preferences? What is the importance of information for building game models? How can game models be used to analyse empirical cases?

At the cutting edge of current modelling in international relations using non-co-operative game theory, this collection of original contributions from political scientists and economists explores some of the fundamental assumptions of game theory modelling.

It includes a theory of game pay-off formation, a theory of preference aggregation, thorough discussions of the effects of interdependence between preferences upon various game structures, in-depth analyses of the impact of incomplete information upon dynamic games of negotiation,...

— from OpenLibrary
2 editions at OpenLibrary
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