This article develops a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple strategic agents that extends the static model studied previously by the authors. It describes a general model of several interacting agents, their domination relations as well as a graph encoding their information pattern. It provides a general resolution algorithm and discusses the dynamics around the equilibrium. Our model explains apparent irrational or biased individual behaviors as the result of the actions of several goal-specific rational agents. Our main example is a three-agent model describing " the conscious " , " the unconscious " , and " the body ". We show that, when the unconscious strategically dominates, the equilibrium is uncon...
We adopt the decision-theoretic principle of expected utility maximization as a paradigm for design...
We adopt the decision-theoretic principle of expected utility maximization as a paradigm for designi...
Can boundedly rational agents survive competition with fully rational agents? The authors develop a ...
This article develops a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article presents a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article develops a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article presents a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article develops a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple agents, including the p...
This paper advocates that some limits of the rational agent hypothesis result from the improper assu...
This paper advocates that some limits of the rational agent hypothesis result from the improper assu...
We adopt the decision-theoretic principle of expected utility maximization as a paradigm for design...
We adopt the decision-theoretic principle of expected utility maximization as a paradigm for designi...
Can boundedly rational agents survive competition with fully rational agents? The authors develop a ...
This article develops a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article presents a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article develops a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article presents a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
This article develops a general method to solve dynamic models of interactions between multiple stra...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple and possibly strategic ...
We develop a general method to solve models of interactions between multiple agents, including the p...
This paper advocates that some limits of the rational agent hypothesis result from the improper assu...
This paper advocates that some limits of the rational agent hypothesis result from the improper assu...
We adopt the decision-theoretic principle of expected utility maximization as a paradigm for design...
We adopt the decision-theoretic principle of expected utility maximization as a paradigm for designi...
Can boundedly rational agents survive competition with fully rational agents? The authors develop a ...