William Dalrymple (historian)
Game theory is a branch of mathematics that uses models to study interactions with formalized incentive structures ("games"). It has applications in a variety of fields, including economics, evolutionary biology, political science, social psychology and military strategy.
Subcategories
This category has the following 20 subcategories, out of 20 total.
°
+
~
- Bankruptcy theory (6 P)
- Bargaining theory (8 P)
- Evolutionary game theory (15 P)
- Mechanism design (46 P)
C
D
- Determinacy (22 P)
F
G
I
M
N
S
T
- Topological games (5 P)
- Tragedy of the commons (7 P)
Pages in category "Game theory"
The following 171 pages are in this category, out of 171 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
A
B
C
- Chainstore paradox
- Cheap talk
- Chemical game theory
- Collusion
- Combinatorial explosion
- Commitment device
- Common knowledge (logic)
- Competitive altruism
- Competitive regret
- Complete information
- Complete mixing
- Compositional game theory
- Compromise
- Confrontation analysis
- Conjectural variation
- Consensus dynamics
- Contingent cooperator
- Contract theory
- Cooperative game theory
- Coopetition
- Costly state verification
- Countersignaling
E
F
G
K
M
- Markov strategy
- Martingale (probability theory)
- Max-dominated strategy
- Max^n algorithm
- Mean payoff game
- Mean-field game theory
- Median voter theorem
- Metagame
- Metagame analysis
- Minimal-entropy martingale measure
- Minimax
- Minimax theorem
- Minimum effort game
- Move by nature
- Multi-agent reinforcement learning
- Mutual knowledge
- Mutual knowledge (logic)
P
R
S
- Shapley–Shubik power index
- Signalling (economics)
- Simultaneous action selection
- Simultaneous game
- Social rationality
- Social software (research field)
- Social trap
- Social value orientations
- Solution concept
- Spite (game theory)
- Stable roommates problem
- Stackelberg competition
- Strategic complements
- Strategic dominance
- Strategic fair division
- Strategic move
- Strategy-stealing argument
- Strategyproofness
- Subgame
- Subjective expected relative similarity
- Sunk cost
- Superrationality
- Swap regret