But what if player 2 irreversibly 'locks in' his right choice somehow. Assume he writes his move down on a piece of paper, shows it to player 1, and submits his move in advance, thereby locking in 'right.' Now the game actually would be changed for Player 1 no? So perhaps player 2 has some leverage to win after all.
I understand the theory of SPNE (I knew it would come to 10,5 ) but I am stuck on the notation. Would the SPNE be represented as (Left, (Left, Right)) meaning player 1 plays left and player 2 plays left unless player 1 plays right then player 2 plays right? PLS HELP
The best sinple example on this topic. Thank you for posting.
It's impressive none of the videos of extended games form actually do the matrix of payoffs :/ it's so confusing to do them.
I can't hear your audio
Very helpful. Thank you
Thank you, Sir!
You are welcome!
But what if player 2 irreversibly 'locks in' his right choice somehow. Assume he writes his move down on a piece of paper, shows it to player 1, and submits his move in advance, thereby locking in 'right.' Now the game actually would be changed for Player 1 no? So perhaps player 2 has some leverage to win after all.
I understand the theory of SPNE (I knew it would come to 10,5 ) but I am stuck on the notation. Would the SPNE be represented as (Left, (Left, Right)) meaning player 1 plays left and player 2 plays left unless player 1 plays right then player 2 plays right? PLS HELP
Thank you for the amazing video
Thank you thank you soooo muchhh😅 finally understand
Hi do you by chance offer tutoring?
Sir, plz can u share some pdf note on this topic, that is your utmost kindness.
Nice example about "cheap talk". Easy to grasp.
you need to speak louder
Thanks a lot!
Can't hear you
Laora audio