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Nondegeneracy Problems in Cooperative Game Theory

In: Mathematical Programming The State of the Art

Author

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  • J. Rosenmüller

    (Universität Bielefeld, Institut für Mathematische Wirtschaftsforschung)

Abstract

Game Theory originally is rooting to a certain extent in the various fields of optimization and programming. Most students of elementary courses in linear programming techniques are familiar with the fact that there is a close relation between the optimal solutions of an L.P. and the optimal strategies of an associated matrix game. Hence, if we introduce the mixed extension of a finite two-person zero-sum game then, according to von Neumann’s minimax theorem, there exist always optimal mixed strategies for both players and, in addition, it is easy to define a certain associated linear program such if we obtain the optimal solutions of this L.P., say, via the simplex algorithm, then this optimal solutions simultaneously yield the optimal strategies of the two-person game under consideration.

Suggested Citation

  • J. Rosenmüller, 1983. "Nondegeneracy Problems in Cooperative Game Theory," Springer Books, in: Achim Bachem & Bernhard Korte & Martin Grötschel (ed.), Mathematical Programming The State of the Art, pages 391-416, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-642-68874-4_16
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-68874-4_16
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