English

Game Theory with Translucent Players

Computer Science and Game Theory 2013-08-20 v1

Abstract

A traditional assumption in game theory is that players are opaque to one another---if a player changes strategies, then this change in strategies does not affect the choice of other players' strategies. In many situations this is an unrealistic assumption. We develop a framework for reasoning about games where the players may be translucent to one another; in particular, a player may believe that if she were to change strategies, then the other player would also change strategies. Translucent players may achieve significantly more efficient outcomes than opaque ones. Our main result is a characterization of strategies consistent with appropriate analogues of common belief of rationality. Common Counterfactual Belief of Rationality (CCBR) holds if (1) everyone is rational, (2) everyone counterfactually believes that everyone else is rational (i.e., all players i believe that everyone else would still be rational even if ii were to switch strategies), (3) everyone counterfactually believes that everyone else is rational, and counterfactually believes that everyone else is rational, and so on. CCBR characterizes the set of strategies surviving iterated removal of minimax dominated strategies, where a strategy s for player i is minimax dominated by s' if the worst-case payoff for i using s' is better than the best possible payoff using s.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1308.3778,
  title  = {Game Theory with Translucent Players},
  author = {Joseph Y. Halpern and Rafael Pass},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1308.3778},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

Extended version of a paper that appear in the Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge, 2013

R2 v1 2026-06-22T01:10:48.328Z