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]Buenas tardes gente, aca les dejo un breve resumen acerca de un curso que encontre en el repositorio gratuito del sitio de la universidad de Yale, el unico temita es que esta todo en ingles, pero al que le guste, o este estudiandolo creo que le va a ser de gran utilidad. Contiene los transcripts de todas las clases y videos en calidad alta o mediana para descargar de forma gratuita, como asi tambien cuestionarios para ir autoevaluandose. Game Theory with Professor Ben Polak About the Course This course is an introduction to game theory and strategic thinking. Ideas such as dominance, backward induction, Nash equilibrium, evolutionary stability, commitment, credibility, asymmetric information, adverse selection, and signaling are discussed and applied to games played in class and to examples drawn from economics, politics, the movies, and elsewhere. Course Structure: This Yale College course, taught on campus twice per week for 75 minutes, was recorded for Open Yale Courses in Fall 2007. Class Sessions 1. Introduction: five first lessons 2. Putting yourselves into other people's shoes 3. Iterative deletion and the median-voter theorem 4. Best responses in soccer and business partnerships 5. Nash equilibrium: bad fashion and bank runs 6. Nash equilibrium: dating and Cournot 7. Nash equilibrium: shopping, standing and voting on a line 8. Nash equilibrium: location, segregation and randomization 9. Mixed strategies in theory and tennis 10. Mixed strategies in baseball, dating and paying your taxes 11. Evolutionary stability: cooperation, mutation, and equilibrium 12. Evolutionary stability: social convention, aggression, and cycles Midterm Exam 13. Sequential games: moral hazard, incentives, and hungry lions 14. Backward induction: commitment, spies, and first-mover advantages 15. Backward induction: chess, strategies, and credible threats 16. Backward induction: reputation and duels 17. Backward induction: ultimatums and bargaining 18. Imperfect information: information sets and sub-game perfection 19. Subgame perfect equilibrium: matchmaking and strategic investments 20. Subgame perfect equilibrium: wars of attrition 21. Repeated games: cooperation vs. the end game 22. Repeated games: cheating, punishment, and outsourcing 23. Asymmetric information: silence, signaling and suffering education 24. Asymmetric information: auctions and the winner's curse Final Exam About Professor Ben Polak Ben Polak is a Professor of Economics and Management in the Department of Economics and the School of Management at Yale University. He received his B.A. from Trinity College, Cambridge University, his M.A. from Northwestern University, and his Ph.D. from Harvard University. A specialist in microeconomic theory and economic history, he has published in Economic Letters, Journal of Economic Theory, Journal of Economic History, Journal of Legal Studies, Journal of Theoretical and Institutional Economics, and Econometrica. His current projects include "Generalized Utilitarianism and Harsanyi's Impartial Observer Theorem" and "Mean-Dispersion Preferences." http://oyc.yale.edu/economics/game-theory Muchas gracias, espero sus comentarios! Santi