TY - BOOK ID - 16861221 TI - Chapters in game theory : in honor of Stef Tijs AU - Borm, Peter AU - Peters, Hans J. M. AU - Tijs, Stef PY - 2002 VL - 31 SN - 1402070632 9786610200139 1280200138 030647526X 9781402070631 PB - Boston: Kluwer, DB - UniCat KW - Game theory KW - Jeux [Théorie des ] KW - Speltheorie KW - Théorie des jeux KW - Business & Economics KW - Mathematics KW - Physical Sciences & Mathematics KW - Economic Theory KW - Algebra KW - Economic theory. KW - Microeconomics. KW - Operations research. KW - Decision making. KW - Economic Theory/Quantitative Economics/Mathematical Methods. KW - Operations Research/Decision Theory. KW - Deciding KW - Decision (Psychology) KW - Decision analysis KW - Decision processes KW - Making decisions KW - Management KW - Management decisions KW - Choice (Psychology) KW - Problem solving KW - Operational analysis KW - Operational research KW - Industrial engineering KW - Management science KW - Research KW - System theory KW - Price theory KW - Economics KW - Economic theory KW - Political economy KW - Social sciences KW - Economic man KW - Decision making KW - Game theory. KW - Games, Theory of KW - Theory of games KW - Mathematical models UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:16861221 AB - Chapters in Game Theory has been written on the occasion of the 65th birthday of Stef Tijs, who can be regarded as the godfather of game theory in the Netherlands. The contributors all are indebted to Stef Tijs, as former Ph.D. students or otherwise. The book contains fourteen chapters on a wide range of subjects. Some of these can be considered surveys while other chapters present new results: most contributions can be positioned somewhere in between these categories. The topics covered include: cooperative stochastic games; noncooperative stochastic games; sequencing games; games arising form linear (semi-) infinite programming problems; network formation, costs and potential games; potentials and consistency in transferable utility games; the nucleolus and equilibrium prices; population uncertainty and equilibrium selection; cost sharing; centrality in social networks; extreme points of the core; equilibrium sets of bimatrix games; game theory and the market; and transfer procedures for nontransferable utility games. Both editors did their Ph.D with Stef Tijs, while he was affiliated with the mathematics department of the University of Nijmegen. ER -