
In a q from which each player independently picks a number. The choices are hen compared...
Each of two players chooses a number '1' or '2' independently from the other player. P1 wins if the sum is odd. If the sum is even, p2 wins. The payoff to P1 is P1's number multiplied bt P2's number. Find the matrix of this zero-sum game, the value, and the optimal strategies of the players
extra credit for a game the player picks a four digit number using 0-9 for each digit. The four digits are drawn from four separate containers. If the player matches all four digits in the same order, the person wins $1,000. If the person matches the first three of the four digits in any order, the person wins a $100. Otherwise the person wins nothing. Find the fair price to charge to play the game. The fair price is ____________________
First part: Consider the following two-player game. The players simultaneously and independently announce an integer number between 1 and 100, and each player's payoff is the product of the two numbers announced. (a) Describe the best responses of this game. How many Nash equilibria does the game have? Explain. (b) Now, consider the following variation of the game: first, Player 1 can choose either to "Stop" or "Con- tinue". If she chooses "Stop", then the game ends with the pair...
6. Consider a sequential game with 3 players. Player 1 can choose A or B. Player 2 can choose C, D, E, or F (depending on what player 1 chooses). Player 3 can choose G, H, I, J, K, L, M, or N (depending on what player 1 and 2 choose). Player 1 (P1) goes first, player 2 (P2) goes second, and player 3 (P3) goes third. Payoffs are written as the payoffs for P1, P2, and the for P3....
4. (a) (10%) A player has three information sets in the game tree. He has four choices in his first information set, four in his second and three in his third. How many strategies does he have in the strategic form? Circle one: (i) 11, (ii) 28 (iii) 48 (iv) 18. (b) (10%) Is it true that the following game is a Prisoners' Dilemma? Explain which features of a Prisoners' Dilemma hold and which do not. (Remember each player must...
Dominance: Ten players simultaneously and noncooperatively each pick a real number in [0,1]. Let their choices be X1, X2, ....X10. Let X be the average of all the x's. The game proceeds as follows. Everyone picks their value x. Then the average X is calculated. Whichever of the players guesses closest to 2/3 the value of X wins $1 and all other players get nothing. If there is a tie, then they flip coins for a single winner. Can this...
1. Assuming all players use pure strategies, descrbe the best response strategy for each player and determine the pure strategy Nash Equilibrium for each of the following games. a) Coordination Game: In such games the two players benefit from coordinating their actions. The "Prisoner's Dlemma" game we studied in class was an example of such coordination game. Here is another example known as "Battle of the Sexes. In this game a husband and wife trying to decide how they should...
1. Assuming all players use pure strategies, describe the best response strategy for each player and determine the pure strategy Nash Equilibrium for each of the following games. a) Coordination Game: In such games the two players benefit from coordinating their actions. The "Prisoner's Dilemma" game we studied in class was an example of such coordination game. Here is another example known as "Battle of the Sexes." In this game a husband and wife trying to decide how they should...
PLEASE INCLUDE SAW-PROMPTS FOR 2 PLAYERS NAMES(VALIDATE NAMES). SHOW MENU (PLAYER MUST SELECT FROM MENU B4 THE GAME STARTS 1=PLAY GAME, 2=SHOW GAME RULES, 3=SHOW PLAYER STATISTICS, AND 4=EXIT GAME WITH A GOODBYE MESSAGE.) PLAYERS NEED OPTION TO SHOW STATS(IN A DIFFERNT WINDOW-FOR OPTION 3)-GAME SHOULD BE rock, paper, scissor and SAW!! PLEASE USE A JAVA GRAPHICAL USER INTERFACE. MUST HAVE ROCK, PAPER, SCISSORS, AND SAW PLEASE This project requires students to create a design for a “Rock, Paper, Scissors,...
Identify the definition for each term listed below from the following list. 1. The study of how people make decisions where attaining goals depends on interactions with others. 2. A table that shows the payoffs each firm earns from every combination of firm strategies. 3. An agreement among firms to charge the same price or otherwise not to compete. 4. A strategy that is the best for a firm, no matter what strategies other firms use. 5. A situation in...