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Published 1995 | public
Journal Article

Subjective games and equilibria

Abstract

Applying the concepts of Nash, Bayesian, and correlated equilibria to the analysis of strategic interaction requires that players possess objective knowledge of the game and opponents' strategies. Such knowledge is often not available. The proposed notions of subjective games and of subjective Nash and correlated equilibria replace essential but unavailable objective knowledge by subjective assessments. When playing a subjective game repeatedly, subjective optimizers converge to a subjective equilibrium. We apply this approach to some well known examples including single- and multi-person, multi-arm bandit games and repeated Cournot oligopoly games.

Additional Information

© 1995 Elsevier Inc. Received 29 November 1993. The authors acknowledge valuable communications with Andreas Blume, Eddie Dekel-Tabak, Itzhak Gilboa, David Kreps, Sylvain Sorin, as well as participants in the 1993 Summer in Tel Aviv Workshop and in seminars at the University of California, San Diego; the California Institute of Technology; and the University of Chicago. The research was supported by NSF Economics Grants SES-9022305 and SBR-9223156 and by the Division of Humanities and Social Sciences of the California Institute of Technology. This paper is an extended version of "Bounded Learning Leads to Correlated Equilibrium" (see Kalai and Lehrer, 1991).

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023