Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5

This edited volume contains a selection of papers that are an outgrowth of the Fifth International Conference on Game Theory and Management with a few additional contributed papers. These papers present an outlook of the current development of the theory of games and its applications to management a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Petrosyan, Leon A. (ed.), Zenkevich, Nikolay A. (ed.)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Saint Petersburg State University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11701/1236
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institution Open Polar
collection Saint Petersburg State University: Research Repository (DSpace SPbU)
op_collection_id ftstpetersburgun
language English
topic game theory
management
spellingShingle game theory
management
Petrosyan, Leon A. (ed.)
Zenkevich, Nikolay A. (ed.)
Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5
topic_facet game theory
management
description This edited volume contains a selection of papers that are an outgrowth of the Fifth International Conference on Game Theory and Management with a few additional contributed papers. These papers present an outlook of the current development of the theory of games and its applications to management and various domains, in particular, finance, environment and economics. The International Conference on Game Theory and Management, a three day conference, was held in St. Petersburg, Russia in June 27-29, 2011. It was the initiative of St. Petersburg University carried out by the Graduate School of Management SPbU and the Department of Applied Mathematics Control Processes SPbU in collaboration with The International Society of Dynamic Games (Russian Chapter). More than 100 participants from 25 countries had an opportunity to hear state-of-the-art presentations on a wide range of game-theoretic models, both theory and management applications. Plenary lectures covered different areas of games and management applications. They had been delivered by Professor Roger B. Myerson, University of Chicago (USA), Nobel Prize Winner in Economics in 2007; Professor Jorgen W. Weibull, Stockholm School in Economics (Sweden); Shmuel Zamir, The Hebrew University (Israel); Vladimir V. Mazalov, Institute of Applied Mathematical Research, Karelian Research Center RAS (Russia). The importance of strategic behavior in the human and social world is increasingly recognized in theory and practice. As a result, game theory has emerged as a fundamental instrument in pure and applied research. The discipline of game theory studies decision making in an interactive environment. It draws on mathematics, statistics, operations research, engineering, biology, economics, political science and other subjects. In canonical form, a game obtains when an individual pursues an objective(s) in a situation in which other individuals concurrently pursue other (possibly conflicting, possibly overlapping) objectives and in the same time the objectives cannot be reached by individual actions of one decision maker. The problem is then to determine each individual’s optimal decision, how these decisions interact to produce equilibria, and the properties of such outcomes. The foundations of game theory were laid more than sixty years ago by von Neumann and Morgenstern (1944). Theoretical research and applications in games are proceeding apace, in areas ranging from aircraft and missile control to inventory management, market development, natural resources extraction, competition policy, negotiation techniques, macroeconomic and environmental planning, capital accumulation and investment. In all these areas, game theory is perhaps the most sophisticated and fertile paradigm applied mathematics can offer to study and analyze decision making under real world conditions. The papers presented at this Fifth International Conference on Game Theory and Management certainly reflect both the maturity and the vitality of modern day game theory and management science in general, and of dynamic games, in particular. The maturity can be seen from the sophistication of the theorems, proofs, methods and numerical algorithms contained in the most of the papers in these contributions. The vitality is manifested by the range of new ideas, new applications, the growing number of young researchers and the expanding world wide coverage of research centers and institutes from whence the contributions originated. The contributions demonstrate that GTM2011 offers an interactive program on wide range of latest developments in game theory and management. It includes recent advances in topics with high future potential and exiting developments in classical fields. The collection contains papers accepted for the Fifth International Conference Game Theory and Management (June 27–29, 2011, St. Petersburg University, St. Petersburg, Russia). The presented papers belong to the field of game theory and its applications to management. The volume may be recommended for researches and post-graduate students of management, economic and applied mathematics departments.
format Book
author Petrosyan, Leon A. (ed.)
Zenkevich, Nikolay A. (ed.)
author_facet Petrosyan, Leon A. (ed.)
Zenkevich, Nikolay A. (ed.)
author_sort Petrosyan, Leon A. (ed.)
title Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5
title_short Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5
title_full Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5
title_fullStr Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5
title_full_unstemmed Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5
title_sort contributions to game theory and management, vol. 5
publisher Saint Petersburg State University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/11701/1236
genre karelia*
karelian
genre_facet karelia*
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spelling ftstpetersburgun:oai:dspace.spbu.ru:11701/1236 2023-05-15T17:01:08+02:00 Contributions to Game Theory and Management, Vol. 5 Petrosyan, Leon A. (ed.) Zenkevich, Nikolay A. (ed.) 2012-06 http://hdl.handle.net/11701/1236 English eng Saint Petersburg State University game theory management Book 2012 ftstpetersburgun 2018-10-02T16:35:14Z This edited volume contains a selection of papers that are an outgrowth of the Fifth International Conference on Game Theory and Management with a few additional contributed papers. These papers present an outlook of the current development of the theory of games and its applications to management and various domains, in particular, finance, environment and economics. The International Conference on Game Theory and Management, a three day conference, was held in St. Petersburg, Russia in June 27-29, 2011. It was the initiative of St. Petersburg University carried out by the Graduate School of Management SPbU and the Department of Applied Mathematics Control Processes SPbU in collaboration with The International Society of Dynamic Games (Russian Chapter). More than 100 participants from 25 countries had an opportunity to hear state-of-the-art presentations on a wide range of game-theoretic models, both theory and management applications. Plenary lectures covered different areas of games and management applications. They had been delivered by Professor Roger B. Myerson, University of Chicago (USA), Nobel Prize Winner in Economics in 2007; Professor Jorgen W. Weibull, Stockholm School in Economics (Sweden); Shmuel Zamir, The Hebrew University (Israel); Vladimir V. Mazalov, Institute of Applied Mathematical Research, Karelian Research Center RAS (Russia). The importance of strategic behavior in the human and social world is increasingly recognized in theory and practice. As a result, game theory has emerged as a fundamental instrument in pure and applied research. The discipline of game theory studies decision making in an interactive environment. It draws on mathematics, statistics, operations research, engineering, biology, economics, political science and other subjects. In canonical form, a game obtains when an individual pursues an objective(s) in a situation in which other individuals concurrently pursue other (possibly conflicting, possibly overlapping) objectives and in the same time the objectives cannot be reached by individual actions of one decision maker. The problem is then to determine each individual’s optimal decision, how these decisions interact to produce equilibria, and the properties of such outcomes. The foundations of game theory were laid more than sixty years ago by von Neumann and Morgenstern (1944). Theoretical research and applications in games are proceeding apace, in areas ranging from aircraft and missile control to inventory management, market development, natural resources extraction, competition policy, negotiation techniques, macroeconomic and environmental planning, capital accumulation and investment. In all these areas, game theory is perhaps the most sophisticated and fertile paradigm applied mathematics can offer to study and analyze decision making under real world conditions. The papers presented at this Fifth International Conference on Game Theory and Management certainly reflect both the maturity and the vitality of modern day game theory and management science in general, and of dynamic games, in particular. The maturity can be seen from the sophistication of the theorems, proofs, methods and numerical algorithms contained in the most of the papers in these contributions. The vitality is manifested by the range of new ideas, new applications, the growing number of young researchers and the expanding world wide coverage of research centers and institutes from whence the contributions originated. The contributions demonstrate that GTM2011 offers an interactive program on wide range of latest developments in game theory and management. It includes recent advances in topics with high future potential and exiting developments in classical fields. The collection contains papers accepted for the Fifth International Conference Game Theory and Management (June 27–29, 2011, St. Petersburg University, St. Petersburg, Russia). The presented papers belong to the field of game theory and its applications to management. The volume may be recommended for researches and post-graduate students of management, economic and applied mathematics departments. Book karelia* karelian Saint Petersburg State University: Research Repository (DSpace SPbU)