An experimental study of constant-sum centipede games
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2564154
DOI10.1007/BF02425258zbMath0859.90125OpenAlexW1972963388MaRDI QIDQ2564154
Thomas R. Palfrey, Mark Fey, Richard D. McKelvey
Publication date: 7 January 1997
Published in: International Journal of Game Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02425258
Related Items (10)
Competitive centipede games: zero-end payoffs and payoff inequality deter reciprocal cooperation ⋮ A note on disbelief in others regarding backward induction ⋮ Non-equilibrium play in centipede games ⋮ Equilibrium play and adaptive learning in a three-person centipede game. ⋮ Endogenous quantal response equilibrium ⋮ Knowing me, imagining you: projection and overbidding in auctions ⋮ King of the Hill: giving backward induction its best shot ⋮ Heterogeneous quantal response equilibrium and cognitive hierarchies ⋮ Understanding perpetual R\&D races ⋮ Voluntary contributions by consent or dissent
Cites Work
- Likelihood Ratio Tests for Model Selection and Non-Nested Hypotheses
- On the non-existence of a rationality definition for extensive games
- A bounded-rationality approach to the study of noncooperative games
- Games of perfect information, predatory pricing and the chain-store paradox
- Imperfect equilibrium
- Efficiency by trust in fairness? Multiperiod ultimatum bargaining experiments with an increasing cake
- Quantal response equilibria for normal form games
- On players' models of other players: Theory and experimental evidence
- Common belief and the theory of games with perfect information
- Are People Bayesian? Uncovering Behavioral Strategies
- A note on degeneracy in linear programming
- An Experimental Study of the Centipede Game
This page was built for publication: An experimental study of constant-sum centipede games