Econ 414 Lecture: Mixed Strategies: Jeff Borowitz
Econ 414 Lecture: Mixed Strategies: Jeff Borowitz
Econ 414 Lecture: Mixed Strategies: Jeff Borowitz
Examles
More General Examples
Conclusion
Summer I 2010
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Examles
Battle of the Sexes
Evolution Example
Matching Pennies
The Prisoners Dilemma
Conclusion
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
Outline
1
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
Matching Pennies
H
T
H
1,-1
-1,1
T
-1,1
1,-1
Alice and Bob both choose heads or tails, then announce their
choices.
If they choose the same thing, Bob pays Alice $1
If they choose the opposite thing, Alice pays Bob $1
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
Matching Pennies
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H
1,-1
-1,1
T
-1,1
1,-1
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
Mixed Strategies
n
X
ji sji
j=1
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
Definition (Transitivity)
For every lottery A, B, and C , if u(A) u(B) and u(B) u(C ), then it
must be true that u(A) u(C )
Definition (Independence)
Let A and B be two lotteries with u(A) u(B) and let C be any other
lottery. For p (0, 1],
u (pA + (1 p)C ) u (pB + (1 p)C )
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
p
p
p
p
Mixed
= 1, q = 1
= 0, q = 1
= 1, q = 0
= 1, q = 1
Pure
(H, H)
(T , H)
(H, T )
(T , T )
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
1/2
BR (q)
A
BR (p)
B
0
0
1/2
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
John Nash
A video...
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
Nash
Blonde
Brunette
Friend
Blonde Brunette
0, 0
10, 8
8, 10
8, 8
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Motivation
Definitions
John Nash and Mixed Strategies
Nashs Work
Consider the games:
Bob
H
T
H
1, 1
1, 1
Alice
T
1, 1
1, 1
There are two cases:
Bob
C
Alice
RS
C
3, 3
4, 0
RS
0, 4
1, 1
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Best Responses
Best Responses Functions
1/2
BRA(q)
BR (p)
B
0
0
1/2
Outline
1
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F
1, 3
0, 0
O
0, 0
3, 1
Alice and Bob randomize over strategies, playing F with probability p and
q respectively.
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Alice maximizes:
E [uA ] =p E [uA (F )] + (1 p) E [uA (O)]
where E [uA (F )] =q uA (F , F ) + (1 q) uA (F , O)
=q (1) + (1 q) (0) = q
E [uA (O)] =q uA (O, F ) + (1 q) uA (O, O)
=q (0) + (1 q) (3) = 3 (1 q)
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E [uA ]
=0 = E [uA (F )] E [uA (O)]
p
E [uA (F )] =E [uA (O)]
So Alice must get the same expected utility from playing F and O. The
same general condition applies to Bob.
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It was a lot of work to solve the Battle of the Sexes with mixed
strategies.
Luckily, theres is a shortcut that we stumbled on that always works
If there is a mixed strategy NE, agents must get the same expected
utility from playing each strategy when they play it
Otherwise, it wouldnt be an equilibrium
The player could play whichever strategy was giving higher expected
utility a little more, which would increase total expected utility
The shortcut:
Calculate the expected utility that each player gets from playing each
strategy and compare them.
If one is always larger than the other, then the player will only play that
strategy in equilibrium (like playing C in the Prisoners Dilemma)
If the two utilities can be made equal, then they will be equal in the
mixed strategy NE
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Goat 1 F
B
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Goat
F
-1,-1
0,8
2
B
8,0
5,5
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Here, the mixed strategy Nash Equilibrium is like what fraction of the
population would be fighters so that neither fighters nor backers down
have an advantage
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Econ 414 Lecture: Mixed Strategies
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Solution
Let Goat 1 play F with probability p and Goat 2 play F with
probability q.
Ignore that p and q should have to be equal if the goats who fight
come from the same population (a slightly different story could have
two roles of goats with different probabilities)
Goat 1 gets the same utility from playing F and B, otherwise the
Goat 1 population would evolve to get higher utility.
E [u1 (F )] =E [u1 (B)]
q u1 (F , F ) + (1 q) u1 (F , B) =q u1 (B, F ) + (1 q) u1 (B, B)
q (1) + (1 q) (8) =q (0) + (1 q) (5)
3 3q =q
q = 3/4
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Solution, Continued
Goat 1
F
B
Goat
F
-1,-1
0,8
2
B
8,0
5,5
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Solution, Continued
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Solution: Implications
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q > 1/2
1,
p [0, 1], q = 1/2
pBR = BRA (q) =
0,
q < 1/2
qBR
p > 1/2
0,
= BRB (p) =
q [0, 1], p = 1/2
1,
p < 1/2
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BR (p)
1/2
0
0
1/2
p
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Question
Yes
No
Question
Yes
No
Yes: Every game has at least one Nash Equilibrium. That Nash
Equilibrium might or might not be in pure strategies, but since a pure
strategy is a generalization of a mixed strategy, this is true
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Outline
1
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A 3x3 Game
Consider this game:
T
Alice M
B
Note that there are no Nash
Bob
L
M
R
7, 0 6, 3 7, 0
9, 2 7, 6
0, 8
6, 9 7, 1
2, 8
Equilibria in pure strategies:
T
Alice M
B
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L
7, 0
9, 2
6, 9
Bob
M
6, 3
7, 6
7, 1
R
7, 0
0, 8
2, 8
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Mixed Strategies
Using the conditions for a mixed strategy:
E [uA (T )] = E [uA (M)] = E [uA (B)]
E [uB (L)] = E [uB (M)] = E [uB (R)]
Note that this gives 4 conditions in our 4 unknowns (pT , pM , qL , qM )
Calculating E [uA (T )], E [uA (M)], E [uA (B)] and we find:
E [uA (T )] =7qL + 6qM + 7(1 qL qM ) = 7 qM
E [uA (M)] =9qL + 7qM + 0(1 qL qM ) = 9qL + 7qM
E [uA (B)] =6qL + 7qM + 2(1 qL qM ) = 2 + 4qL + 5qM
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0.25
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
q
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Outline
1
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Require assumptions
Will select some outcomes of a game as solutions
Have a tradeoff between assumptions and solutions that it chooses
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Nash Equilibrium
Pure Strategy NE
Mixed Strategy NE
Still to Come:
Subgame Perfect Nash Equilibrium
Bayesian Nash Equilibrium
Perfect Bayesian Nash Equilibrium
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The End