Algorithmic Economics, August 6-10, 2012, Carnegie Mellon University.
You will find slides and videos for:
- Itai Ashlagi: “Market Design”
- Avrim Blum: “On-Line Learning and Game Theory”
- Vincent Conitzer: “Computational Social Choice”
- Constantinos Daskalakis: “Computational Complexity in Games and Auctions”
- Jason Hartline: “Approximation in Mechanism Design”
- Herve Moulin: “Fair Division”
- Eva Tardos: “Auctions as Games: Equilibria and Efficiency”
- Rakesh Vohra: “Linear Programming and Mechanism Design”
- Leeat Yariv: “Diffusion and Strategic Interaction on Social Networks”
Another view of social dynamics. Which is everywhere when you think about it. Not just consumers but sellers, manufacturers, R&D.
There isn’t any human activity separate and apart from social dynamics or influenced by them.
That includes the design, authoring and marketing of topic maps.
I first saw this in a tweet from Stefano Bertolo, mentioning the general link and also the lecture on game theory.
[…] Esse site faz um apanhado de links bem interessante sobre o assunto. Gostar disso:GosteiSeja o primeiro a gostar disso. Etiquetado Algoritmos, Economia Computacional […]
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