Duopoly Strategies Programmed by Experienced Players
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Publication:4340686
DOI10.2307/2171752zbMATH Open0871.90111OpenAlexW1966753272MaRDI QIDQ4340686FDOQ4340686
Michael Mitzkewitz, Gerald R. Uhlich, Reinhard Selten
Publication date: 10 June 1997
Published in: Econometrica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://semanticscholar.org/paper/633cf371ac12d3418b0218f8c96d4829e44cd8c2
Auctions, bargaining, bidding and selling, and other market models (91B26) Noncooperative games (91A10)
Cited In (22)
- Inferring strategies from observed actions: a nonparametric, binary tree classification approach
- A flexible strategy for warring duopolists
- Tacit cooperation, strategic uncertainty, and coordination failure: Evidence from repeated dominance solvable games
- Establishing human connections: experimental evidence from the helping game
- Individual versus group choices of repeated game strategies: a strategy method approach
- Learning to collude tacitly on production levels by oligopolistic agents
- Information and learning in oligopoly: an experiment
- Infinity in the lab. How do people play repeated games?
- Voluntary versus enforced team effort
- The impact of the termination rule on cooperation in a prisoner's dilemma experiment
- Punishment strategies in repeated games: evidence from experimental markets
- A generalized approach to belief learning in repeated games
- Instrumental reciprocity as an error
- How to play \((3\times 3)\)-games.: A strategy method experiment.
- Strategic play and adaptive learning in the sealed-bid bargaining mechanism
- Varying the number of bidders in the first-price sealed-bid auction: experimental evidence for the one-shot game
- Finitely repeated prisoners' dilemma experiments without a commonly known end
- Experimental duopoly markets with demand inertia. Game-playing experiments and the strategy method
- Carl's nonlinear cobweb
- Experimental Cournot oligopoly and inequity aversion
- Cournot meets Bayes-Nash: a discontinuity in behavior in finitely repeated duopoly games
- Mixed strategies in the indefinitely repeated prisoner's dilemma
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