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Lecture III: Normal Form Games

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US & Canada run on 110V ... If only one switches, world convenience offset by continental ... is finite i at least one NE, possibly involving mixed strategies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture III: Normal Form Games


1
Lecture III Normal Form Games
  • Recommended Reading
  • Dixit Skeath Chapters 4, 5, 7, 8
  • Gibbons Chapter 1
  • Osborne Chapters 2-4

2
Recap Introduction
  • A Game
  • Players Strategy Set (rules plans of action)
    Outcomes (payoffs)
  • Nash Equilibrium
  • A best response to a best response
  • i.e., no player wants to alter strategy
    unilaterally
  • If G S1,, Sn u1,, un, the strategies
    (s1,,sn) are a Nash equilibrium if ? i
    ui(s1,,si-1, si, si1,, sn)
    ui(s1,,si-1, si, si1,, sn)

3
Prisoners Dilemma
  • Normal form representation
  • Players have discrete strategies, confess, stay
    silent
  • Cells contain payoffs, rows first, columns
    second

4
Prisoners Dilemma
  • Identify NE by eliminating strictly dominated
    strategies
  • For i, a strategy, si, is strictly dominated by
    si if
  • ui(s1...si-1, si, si1...sn) lt ui(s1...si-1,
    si, si1...sn)
  • ? (s1...si-1, si, si1...sn) ? S
  • i.e., i always does better not playing si
    irrespective of other players strategies

5
Prisoners Dilemma
  • Conversely, a strictly dominant strategy
    maximizes ui irrespective of what others do
  • i should never play a strictly dominated
    strategy
  • If a strictly dominant strategy exists, i should
    play it.
  • But NE does not hinge on existence of strictly
    dominant strategies

6
Prisoners Dilemma
  • Player is Logic
  • Take js strategy as fixed
  • Compare payoffs under different strategies
  • Given sj Silent
  • ui(si(C), sj(S)) 4
  • ui(si(S), sj(S)) 3
  • Given sj Confess
  • ui(si(C), sj(C)) 2
  • ui(si(S), sj(C)) 0

7
Prisoners Dilemma
  • Player is Logic
  • Take js strategy as fixed
  • Compare payoffs under different strategies
  • Given sj Silent
  • ui(si(C), sj(S)) 4
  • ui(si(S), sj(S)) 3
  • Given sj Confess
  • ui(si(C), sj(C)) 2
  • ui(si(S), sj(C)) 0

8
Prisoners Dilemma
  • Player is Logic
  • Take js strategy as fixed
  • Compare payoffs under different strategies
  • Given sj Silent
  • ui(si(C), sj(S)) 4
  • ui(si(S), sj(S)) 3
  • Given sj Confess
  • ui(si(C), sj(C)) 2
  • ui(si(S), sj(C)) 0

9
Weak Dominance
  • Some games do not have strictly dominant
    strategies
  • Battle of Bismark Sea
  • US has no dominant strategy
  • For Japan, N weakly dominates S, (i.e., N at
    least as good as S no matter what US does, and
    sometimes better than S)
  • This allows US to choose strategy generates NE

10
Weak Dominance
  • Elimination of weakly dominated strategies not
    sufficient to identify all NE.
  • US Canada run on 110V (convenient)
  • Both switching to 220V brings world convergence
    extra convenience
  • If only one switches, world convenience offset by
    continental inconvenience
  • For US Canada U(220V) ? U(110V) irrespective
    of others strategy
  • 220V, 220V is NE...
  • 110V, 110V also NE If US is 110V would Canada
    unilaterally switch to 220V?

11
Multiple Equilibria
  • Not all games have unique NE
  • Consider the following games
  • Pure Coordination
  • Battle of the Sexes
  • Stag Hunt

Carla
12
Multiple Equilibria
  • Not all games have unique NE
  • Consider the following games
  • Pure Coordination
  • no reason to for i to resist L, L over R, R
  • but no compelling reason for i to play L or R

Carla
13
Multiple Equilibria
  • Not all games have unique NE
  • Consider the following games
  • Battle of the Sexes
  • conflict coordination
  • still no reason to choose C, C over T, T
  • Credible commitment?

Carla
14
Multiple Equilibria
  • Not all games have unique NE
  • Consider the following games
  • Stag Hunt
  • Pareto optimality provides compelling reason for
    F, F
  • but P, P remains NE despite P being weakly
    dominated by F

Carla
15
No Pure Strategy Nash Equilibria
  • Some games do not have pure strategy NE
  • Consider reformulation of Battle of Bismark Sea
    game
  • Neither player has a dominant strategy
  • At every cell, at least one player want to alter
    strategy
  • No NE!

16
Mixed Strategies
  • If i has k 1K pure strategies, Si
    si1,,siK in G S1,, Sn u1,, un, then a
    mixed strategy is a probability distribution, pi
    (pi1,,piK) s.t. 0 pik 1 and ?pik 1
  • If G S1,,Sn u1,,un, where n is finite and
    Si is finite ? i ? ? at least one NE, possibly
    involving mixed strategies
  • Informally, i plays all her available pure
    strategies with some probability (perhaps Pr 0
    for some)
  • Interpret is mixed stratgy as js uncertainty
    about what strategy i will actually adopt

17
Mixed Strategies in Practice
  • US plays N with Pr p Japan plays N with Pr q
  • US
  • EU(N) 4-2q
  • EU(S) 1 4q
  • EU(N) gt EU(S) iff ½ gt q

18
Mixed Strategies in Practice
  • US plays N with Pr p Japan plays N with Pr q
  • Japan
  • EU(N) 2p
  • EU(S) 4 3p
  • EU(N) gt EU(S) iff p gt 4/5

19
Best-Response Curves
1
  • If q lt 1/2, US should play N with Pr(p) 1
    (it gets more utility)
  • If p gt4/5, Japan should play N with Pr(q) 1
    (ditto)

q
1/2
0
1
4/5
p
USs best-response curve Japans best-response
curve
20
Continuous Strategies The Cournot Game
  • Two firms in competition, i j
  • qi and qj denote quantities of single, homogenous
    good produced by each firm
  • P(Q) a Q is market clearing price, where Q
    qi qj.
  • N.B. (If a lt Q, P(Q) 0, but lets assume a gt
    Q.)
  • Ci(qi) cqi, i.e., constant costs per unit

21
Continuous Strategies The Cournot Game
  • Each firms strategy space is Si 0, ?) so any
    qi 0 is admissible (though a puts an implicit
    limit on qi).
  • Each firms payoffs are equal to their revenues,
    i.e., market price ? quantity costs
  • ?i(qi, qj) qiP(qi qj) c qia (qi
    qj) c
  • Firms choose quantities simultaneously how much
    does / should each produce?

22
Continuous Strategies The Cournot Game
  • Each firms faces an optimization problem
  • max ?i(qi, qj) max qia (qi qj) c
  • 0 q ? 0 q ?
  • To solve, we need to obtain is first-order
    condition, i.e., differentiating above w.r.t qi,
    set equal to 0, and solve
  • qi ½(a qj c)
  • Game is symmetric in strategies payoffs, so
  • qj ½(a qi c)

23
Continuous Strategies The Cournot Game
  • Each firms wants to produce
  • qi ½(a qj c) 1
  • qj ½(a qi c) 2
  • Equations 1 2 tells us what qi and qj are, so
    substitute qj from 2 into Equation 1 and solve
  • qi ½(a ½(a qi c) c)
  • (a c)/3
  • Same holds for j. The NE qi qj (a c)/3

24
Best-Response Curves
  • Drawing best response curves helps to get a
    better sense of the NE
  • The NE occurs at the intersection of each firms
    payoff (i.e., revenue) curve.

qj
qia-(qiqj)-c
(a c)/3
0
(a c)/3
qi
25
Combining Discrete Continuous Strategies
  • Lichbach (1990) provides examples of games in
    which players strategies are discrete but their
    payoffs are continuous
  • Just replace the 1s, 2s 3s etc in our earlier
    examples with a payoff function defined by
    variables as in the Cournot game
  • e.g., if for Row B gt D gt A gt C and for Column C gt
    D gt A gt D, then the game has the form of a
    Prisoners Dilemma

26
Combining Discrete Continuous Strategies
  • In contrast, if for Row A D gt B C, for
    Column, A D gt B C, then the game is a pure
    coordination game
  • We can replace A, B, C, D with functions if we
    wished.
  • Proving that I, I is a unique NE then requires
    showing conditions under which
  • uR(sR(I), sC(.)) gt uR(sR(II), sC(.))
  • uR(sR(I), sC(.)) gt uR(sR(II), sC(.))
  • i.e., that for Row Column, II is strictly
    dominated by I
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