Working Some Problems
Mar 23, 2016
Working Some Problems
Telephone Game
How about xexed strategies?Let Winnie call with probability p and wait with probability 1-p.For what values of w is Colleen indifferent? Expected payoff for Colleen from calling is????Expected payoff for Colleen from waiting is???
C
Are there any pure strategy equilibria?
Listing the N.E• Let p be probability that Winnie calls and 1-p the probability
that she waits. Let q be the probability that Colleen calls and 1-q the probability that she waits.
• Nash equilibria are strategy profiles.• The mixed strategy equilibria include: a) p=0 and q=1 b) p=1 and q=0c) p=1/4 and q=1/4
A Duel
Fastball Curveball
Fastball .35,.65 .3,.7
Curveball .2,.8 .5,.5
Pitcher throws
Batter prepares for
Does this game have any pure strategy equilibria?
A)YesB)No
A DuelFastball Curveball
Fastball .35,.65 .3,.7Curveball .2,.8 .5,.5
Pitcher throws
Batter prepares for
In Nash equilibrium if Batter has positive probability of using each strategy, what is the probability that Pitcher throws a fastball?A) 1/3B) 2/3C) ½D) 4/7E) 3/5
Let’s go figure
• In N.E, Batter will play each strategy with positive probability only if the two strategies have the same expected payoff for him.– Suppose Pitcher throws a fastball with probability p and a
curveball with probability 1-p.– Batter’s expected payoff from “Prepare for Fastball”
is .35p+.30(1-p)– Batter’s expected payoff from “Prepare for curveball”
is .2p+.5(1-p).– These payoffs are equal if .35p+.30(1-p)=.2p+.5(1-p).
• Solve this equation for p.
A Duel
Fastball Curveball
Fastball .35,.65 .3,.7
Curveball .2,.8 .5,.5
Pitcher throws
Batter prepares for
In a mixed strategy Nash equilibrium what is theprobability that Batter prepares for a fastball? A) 4/7B) 3/7C) ½D) 6/7E) 4/5
Does this game have a Nash equilibrium in which Kicker mixes leftand right but does not kick to center?
• If there is a Nash equilibrium where kicker never kicks middle but mixes between left and right, Goalie will never play middle but willmix left and right (Why?)
• If Goalie never plays middle but mixes leftand right, Kicker will kick middle. (Why?)
• So there can’t be a Nash equilibrium whereKicker never kicks Middle. (See why?)
Problem 4: For what values of x is there a mixed strategy Nash equilibrium in which the victim might resist or not resist and the Mugger assigns zero probability to showing a gun?
Problem 7.7, Find mixed strategy Nash equilibria
c dominates a and y dominates z
A mixed strategy N.E. strategy does not give positive probability To any strictly dominated strategy
Look at reduced game without these strategies
Problem 7.7 Find mixed strategy Nash equilibia
For player 1, Bottom strictly dominates Top. Throw out Top
Then for Player 2, Middle weakly dominates Right. Therefore ifPlayer 1 plays bottom with positive probability, player 2 gives zeroProbability to Right. There is no N.E. in which Player 1 plays Bottom with zero probability, (Why?)(If he did, what would Player 2 play? Then what would 1 play?)
A Nash equilibrium is any strategy pair in which the defense defends against the outside run with probability .5 and the offense runs up the middle with probability .75. No matter what the defense does,The offense gets the same payoff from wide left or wide right,So any probabilities pwl and pwr such that pwl+pwr=.25 will be N.E. probabilities for the offense.
Problem 8, Chapter 7
Problem 10.
Each of three players is deciding between the pure strategies go
and stop. The payoff to
go is 120, where m is the number of players that choose go, and
the payoff to stop is 55 m
(which is received regardless of what the other players do). Find
all Nash equilibria in mixed strategies.
Let’s find the “easy ones”.
Are there any symmetric pure strategy equilibria?
How about asymmetric pure strategy equilibria?
How about symmetric mixed strategy equilibrium?
Solve 40p^2+60*2p(1-p)+120(1-p)2=55
40p2-120p+65=0
What about equilibria where one guy is in for sure and othertwo enter with identical mixed strategies?
For mixed strategy guys who bothEnter with probability p, expected payoff from entering is(120/3)p+(120/2)(1-p). They are indifferent about entering or not if 40p+60(1-p)=55. This happens when p=1/4.
This will be an equilibrium if when the other two guys enter withProbability ¼, the remaining guy is better off entering than not.
Payoff to guy who enters for sure is:
40*(1/16)+60*(3/8)+120*(9/16)=92.5>55.
Rock Paper Scissors
Rock 0,0 -1,1 2,-2
Paper 1,-1 0,0 -1,1
Scissors -2,2 1,-1 0,0
Advanced Rock-Paper-Scissors
Are there pure strategy Nash equilibria?
Is there a symmetric mixed strategy Nash equilibrium?
What is it?
Remember: Midterm on ThursdayChapters 2-5 and 7
No need to bring bluebooks. Calculators and phones not allowed