Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5072376 | Games and Economic Behavior | 2011 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Proper rationalizability (Schuhmacher, 1999, Asheim, 2001) is a concept in epistemic game theory based on the following two conditions: (a) a player should be cautious, that is, should not exclude any opponentʼs strategy from consideration; and (b) a player should respect the opponentsʼ preferences, that is, should deem an opponentʼs strategy si infinitely more likely than siâ² if he believes the opponent to prefer si to siâ². A strategy is properly rationalizable if it can optimally be chosen under common belief in the events (a) and (b). In this paper we present an algorithm that for every finite game computes the set of all properly rationalizable strategies. The algorithm is based on the new idea of a preference restriction, which is a pair (si,Ai) consisting of a strategy si, and a subset of strategies Ai, for player i. The interpretation is that player i prefers some strategy in Ai to si. The algorithm proceeds by successively adding preference restrictions to the game.
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Authors
Andrés Perea,