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Myopic equilibria, the spanning property, and subgame bundles

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  • Robert Simon
  • Stanislaw Spiez
  • Henryk Torunczyk

Abstract

For a set-valued function $F$ on a compact subset $W$ of a manifold, spanning is a topological property that implies that $F(x) \ne 0$ for interior points $x$ of $W$. A myopic equilibrium applies when for each action there is a payoff whose functional value is not necessarily affine in the strategy space. We show that if the payoffs satisfy the spanning property, then there exist a myopic equilibrium (though not necessarily a Nash equilibrium). Furthermore, given a parametrized collection of games and the spanning property to the structure of payoffs in that collection, the resulting myopic equilibria and their payoffs have the spanning property with respect to that parametrization. This is a far reaching extension of the Kohberg-Mertens Structure Theorem. There are at least four useful applications, when payoffs are exogenous to a finite game tree (for example a finitely repeated game followed by an infinitely repeated game), when one wants to understand a game strategically entirely with behaviour strategies, when one wants to extends the subgame concept to subsets of a game tree that are known in common, and for evolutionary game theory. The proofs involve new topological results asserting that spanning is preserved by relevant operations on set-valued functions.

Suggested Citation

  • Robert Simon & Stanislaw Spiez & Henryk Torunczyk, 2020. "Myopic equilibria, the spanning property, and subgame bundles," Papers 2007.12876, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2007.12876
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Kohlberg, Elon & Mertens, Jean-Francois, 1986. "On the Strategic Stability of Equilibria," Econometrica, Econometric Society, vol. 54(5), pages 1003-1037, September.
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