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Review of Basic Concepts: Normal Form: 14.126 Game Theory Muhamet Yildiz

The document reviews fundamental concepts in game theory including normal form games, mixed strategies, rationality and dominance, Nash equilibrium, Bayesian games, and existence of equilibrium solutions. Key concepts covered are normal form representations of games, rationalizable strategies, proofs of Nash equilibrium existence, upper-hemicont

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
102 views11 pages

Review of Basic Concepts: Normal Form: 14.126 Game Theory Muhamet Yildiz

The document reviews fundamental concepts in game theory including normal form games, mixed strategies, rationality and dominance, Nash equilibrium, Bayesian games, and existence of equilibrium solutions. Key concepts covered are normal form representations of games, rationalizable strategies, proofs of Nash equilibrium existence, upper-hemicont

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Lucas Sarpe
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Review of Basic Concepts:

Normal form

14.126 Game Theory


Muhamet Yildiz

Road Map
• Normal-form Games
• Dominance & Rationalizability
• Nash Equilibrium
– Existence and continuity properties
• Bayesian Games
– Normal-form/agent-normal-form

representations

– Bayesian Nash equilibrium—equivalence to


Nash equilibrium, existence and continuity

1
Normal-form games
• A (normal form) game is a triplet (N, S, u):
– N = {1, . . . , n} is a (finite) set of players.
– S = S1 × … × Sn where Si is the set of pure
strategies of player i.
– u = (u1,…,un) where ui : S → R is player i’s
vNM utility function.
• A normal form game is finite if S and N are
finite.
• The game is common knowledge.

Mixed Strategies, beliefs


• Δ(X) = Probability distributions on X.
• Δ(Si) = Mixed strategies of player i.
• Independent strategy profile:
σ = σ1 × ... × σn ∈ Δ(S1) × ... × Δ(Sn)
• correlated strategy profile:
σ ∈ Δ(S)
• Δ(S-i) = possible conjectures of player i (beliefs
about the other players’ strategies). [σ-i ∈ Δ(S-i)]
– A player may believe that the other players’ strategies
are correlated!
• Expected payoffs:
ui(σ) = Eσ(ui) = Σs∈Sσ(s)ui(s)

2
Rationality & Dominance
• Player i is rational if he maximizes his expected payoff
given his belief.
• si* is a best reply to a belief σ-i iff
∀si ∈ Si : ui(si*,σ-i) ≥ ui(si,σ-i).
• Bi(σ-i) = best replies to σ-i.
• σi strictly dominates si iff
∀s-i ∈ S-i : ui(σi,s-i) > ui(si,s-i).
• σi weakly dominates si iff
∀s-i ∈ S-i : ui(σi,s-i) ≥ ui(si,s-i) with a strict inequality.

Theorem: In a finite game, si* is never a best reply to a


(possibly correlated) conjecture σ-i iff si* is strictly
dominated (by a possibly mixed strategy).

Proof of Theorem

• Let • SHT: Let C and D be non-empty,


disjoint subsets of Rm with C closed.
– S-i = {s-i
1,…, s-i
m},
Then, ∃r∈Rm\{0} : ∀x∈cl(D) ∀y∈C,
– ui(si,.) = (ui(si,s-i1),…, ui(si,s-im)) r⋅x ≥ r⋅y.
– U = {ui(si,.)|si ∈ Si} • (<=) Define
– Co(U) = convex hull of U D = {x∈Rm|xk > ui(si*,s-ik) ∀k}.
= {ui(σi,.)|σi ∈ Δ(Si)}
• Assume si* is not strictly
• (=>) Assume si*∈Bi(σ-i). dominated.
⇒ ∀si, ui(si*,σ-i) ≥ ui(si,σ-i)
• Co(U) and D are disjoint.
⇒ ∀σi, ui(si*,σ-i) ≥ ui(σi,σ-i)
⇒ No σi strictly dominates si*. • By SHT, ∃r: ∀σi,
ui(si*,σ-i) ≥ ui(σi,σ-i)
where σ-i(s-ik) = rk/(r1+…+ rm)

3
Iterated strict dominance &

Rationalizability

• S0 = S
• Sik = Bi(Δ(S-ik-1))
• (Correlated) Rationalizable strategies:

Si∞ = I Sik
k =0

• Independent rationalizability: si∈Sik iff si∈


Bi(Πj≠iσj) where σj ∈ Δ(Sjk-1) ∀j.
• σi is rationalizable iff σi ∈ Bi(Δ(S-i∞)).
Theorem (fixed-point definition): S∞ is the largest
set Z1×…× Zn s.t. Zi ⊆ Bi(Δ(Z-i)) for each i. (si is
rationalizable iff si∈Zi for such Z1×…× Zn.)

Foundations of rationalizability
• If the game and rationality are common
knowledge, then each player plays a
rationalizable strategy.
• Each rationalizable strategy profile is the
outcome of a situation in which the game and
rationality are common knowledge.
• In any “adaptive” learning model the ratio of
players who play a non-rationalizable strategy
goes to zero as the system evolves.

4
Rationalizability in Cournot

Duopoly

q2
Simultaneously,
each firm i∈{1,2}
produces qi units at 1-c
marginal cost c,
and sells it at price
P = max{0,1-q1-q2}.
1− c
2

q1

1− c
2
1-c

Rationalizability in Cournot
duopoly
• If i knows that qj ≤ q, then qi ≥ (1-c-q)/2.
• If i knows that qj ≥ q, then qi ≤ (1-c-q)/2.
• We know that qj ≥ q0 = 0.
• Then, qi ≤ q1 = (1-c-q0)/2 = (1-c)/2 for each i;
• Then, qi ≥ q2 = (1-c-q1)/2 = (1-c)(1-1/2)/2 for each
i;
• …
• Then, qn ≤ qi ≤ qn+1 or qn+1 ≤ qi ≤ qn where
qn+1 = (1-c-qn)/2 = (1-c)(1-1/2+1/4-…+(-1/2)n)/2.
• As n→∞, qn → (1-c)/3.

5
Nash Equilibrium
• The following are equivalent:
– σ* =(σ1*,…,σn*) is a Nash Equilibrium
– ∀i, σi* ∈ Bi(σ-i*), where Bi contains mixed best replies
– ∀i, ∀si ∈ Si : ui(σi*,σ-i*) ≥ ui(si,σ-i*),
– ∀i, supp(σi*) ⊆ Bi(σ-i*).
• Aumann & Brandenburger: In a 2-person game, if game,
rationality, and conjectures are all mutually known, then
the conjectures constitute a Nash equilibrium.
• For n>2 players, we need common prior assumption and
common knowledge of conjectures.
• Steady states of any adaptive learning process are Nash
equilibria.

Existence and continuity


• For any correspondence F : X → 2Y, where X compact
and Y bounded, F is upper-hemicontinuous iff F has
closed graph:
[xm → x & ym → y & ym ∈ F(xm)] ⇒ y ∈ F(x).
• Berge’s Maximum Theorem (existence and continuity of
individual optimum): Assume f : X×Z→Y is continuous
and X, Y, Z are compact. Let
F(x) = arg maxz∈Zf(x,z).

Then, F is non-empty, compact-valued, and upper­

hemicontinuous.

• Kakutani’s Fixed-point theorem: Let X be a convex,


compact subset of Rm and let F:X→ 2X be a non-empty,
convex-valued correspondence with closed graph. Then,
there exists x∈X such that x∈F(x).

6
Existence of Nash Equilibrium
Theorem: Let each Si be a convex, compact
subset of a Euclidean space and each ui be
continuous in s and quasi-concave in si. Then,
there exists a Nash equilibrium s∈S.
Corollary: Each finite game has a (possibly mixed)
Nash equilibrium σ*.
Proof of corollary: Each Δ(Si) ⊆ Rm is convex and
compact. Each ui(σ) is continuous, and linear in
σi. Then, the game with strategy spaces Δ(Si)
has a NE σ* ∈ Δ(S1) × … × Δ(Sn).

Proof of Existence Theorem


• Let F : S → 2S be the “best reply”
correspondence:

Fi(s) = Bi(s-i)

• By the Maximum Theorem, F is non-empty


and has closed graph.
• By quasi-concavity, F is convex valued.
• By Kakutani fixed-point theorem, F has a
fixed point: s* ∈ F(s*).
• s* is a Nash equilibrium.

7
Upper-hemicontinuity of NE
• X, S are compact metric spaces
• ux(s) is continuous in x∈X and s ∈ S.
• NE(x) is the set of Nash equilibria of (N,S,ux).
• PNE(x) is pure Nash equilibria of (N,S,ux).
Theorem: NE and PNE are upper­
hemicontinuous.
Corollary: If S is finite, NE is non-empty, compact-
valued, and upper-hemicontinuous.
Proof:
• Δ(Si) is compact and ux(σ) is continuous in (x,σ).
• Suppose: xm→x, σm∈NE(xm), σm→σ∉NE(x).
• ∃i, si: ux(si,σ-i) > ux(σ).
• u m (si , σ −mi ) > u m (σ m ) for large m.
x x

Bayesian Games
• A Bayesian game is a list (N, A, Θ, T, u, p):
– N = {1, . . . , n} is a (finite) set of players;
– A = A1 × … × An; Ai is the set of actions of i;
– Θ is the set of payoff relevant parameters;
– T = T1 × … × Tn; Ti is the set of types of i;
– u = (u1,…,un); ui : Θ×A → R is i’s vNM utility function;
– p ∈ Δ(Θ ×T) is a common prior.
• A Bayesian game is a list (N, A, Θ, T, u, p) as
above except ui : Θ ×T ×A → R.
• A Bayesian game is a list (N, A, T, u, p) as above
except ui :T ×A → R.
Fact: All three formulations are equivalent (as long
as you know what you are doing).
Fact: We can replace p with p1,…, pn, dropping CPA.

8
Normal-form representations
• Given a Bayesian game Γ=(N,A,Θ,T,u,p),
• Normal Form: G(Γ)= (N,S,U):
– Si = {functions si: Ti → Ai }
– Ui(s) = Ep[ui(θ,s1(t1),…,sn(tn))].
• Agent-Normal Form: AG(Γ)= (N,S,U):
N = T1 ∪L∪Tn
S ti = Ai for each ti ∈Ti
U ti (s) = E p [ui (θ , s1 (t1 ),K, sn (t n )) | ti ]

Bayesian Nash equilibrium


Definition: σ* =(σ1*,…,σn*) is a Bayesian Nash
Equilibrium iff for each i, ti,
σ i* (ai | ti ) > 0 ⇒ ai ∈ arg max a E p [ui (θ , ai , σ −*i (a−i | t −i )) | ti ]
i

Fact: σ* is a Bayesian Nash equilibrium of Γ iff the


profile σ*(·|ti), ti∈Ti, i∈N is a Nash equilibrium of
AG(Γ).
Fact: If σ* is a Bayesian Nash equilibrium of Γ,
then σ* is a Nash equilibrium of G(Γ). Ιf p(ti)>0
for each ti, the converse is also true.

9
Existence of BNE
Consider Γ=(N,A,Θ,T,u,p) with finite N and T.
Theorem: If
• each Ai is compact and convex
• each ui is bounded, continuous in a, concave
in ai,
then Γ has a pure Bayesian Nash equilibrium.
Proof: AG(Γ) has a pure Nash equilibrium.
Corollary: If A is finite, Γ has a (possibly
mixed) Bayesian Nash equilibrium.

Upper-hemicontinuity of BNE
• A, T finite and Θ, X compact.
• uix(θ,a) continuous in (x,θ,a)
• BNE(x) Bayesian NE of Γx = (N,A,Θ,T,ux,p).
• BNE(p) Bayesian Nash equilibria of (N,A,Θ,T,u,p).

Theorem: BNE is upper-hemicontinuous.

Proof: BNE(x) = NE(AG(Γx)).

Theorem: Assume p(ti) > 0 ∀p∈P, ∀ti∈Ti, for compact

P ⊆ Δ(Θ×T). BNE(p) is upper-hemicontinuous on P.


Proof: Ui(s;p) = Ep[ui(θ,s1(t1),…,sn(tn))] is continuous;
BNE(p) = NE(G((N,A,Θ,T,u,p))).

10
MIT OpenCourseWare
http://ocw.mit.edu

14.126 Game Theory


Spring 2010

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