FreeComputerBooks.com
Links to Free Computer, Mathematics, Technical Books all over the World
|
|
- Title: Games on Graphs
- Author(s) Nathalie Bertrand, et al.
- Publisher: Arxiv.org; eBook (Creative Commons Licensed)
- License(s): Creative Commons License (CC)
- Paperback: N/A
- eBook: PDF (490 pages)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: N/A
- ISBN-13: N/A
- Share This:
The objective of this collaborative textbook is to present the state of the art on Games on Graphs, which is part of a larger research topic called Game Theory. Games on graphs is the field concerned with games whose rules and evolution are represented by a graph.
About the Authors- N/A
-
Algorithmic Game Theory (Noam Nisan, et al)
This book covers many of the hottest area of useful new Game Theory research, introducing deep new problems, techniques, and perspectives that demand the attention of economists as well as computer scientists.
-
Digraphs: Theory, Algorithms and Applications (J. Bang-Jensen)
This book is an essential, comprehensive reference of Digraphs covering the theoretical aspects of the subject, focus on applications which include quantum mechanics, bioinformatics, embedded computing, and the travelling salesman problem.
-
Introduction to Game Theory: a Discovery Approach
This book includes an exploration of the ideas of Game Theory through the rich context of popular culture. It contains sections on applications of the concepts to popular culture. It suggests films, television shows, and novels with themes from game theory.
-
Game Theory Relaunched (Hardy Hanappi)
The game is on. Do you know how to play? Game Theory sets out to explore what can be said about making decisions which go beyond accepting the rules of a game. New simulation tools and network analysis have made game theory omnipresent these days.
-
Games of No Chance (Richard Nowakowski, editor)
A fascinating look at the mathematics behind games such as checkers, chess, Go, Nim, and Nine-Men Morris. This book deals with combinatorial games, that is, games not involving chance or hidden information.
-
Game Theory: A Nontechnical Introduction
Striking an appropriate balance of mathematical and analytical rigor, it teaches game theory by examples - serves as an introduction to game theory for students with no prior game theory knowledge, or with limited background in economics and mathematics.
-
Logic and the Foundations of Game and Decision Theory
This book collects together revised papersoriginally presented at the 7th Conference onLogic and the Foundations of Game and DecisionTheory (LOFT). LOFT is a key venue forpresenting research at the intersection of logic,economics and computer science.
-
Magic Squares and Cubes (William Symes Andrews)
This book cover topics such as magic squares, magic cubes, the Franklin squares, magics and Pythagorean numbers, the theory of reversions, magic circles, spheres, and stars, and magic octahedroids, among other things.
-
Game Theory (Qiming Huang)
This book provides a powerful mathematical framework that can accommodate the preferences and requirements of various stakeholders in a given process as regards the outcome of the process.
-
A Beautiful Math: John Nash, Game Theory, and a Code of Nature
Today neuroscientists peer into game players brains, anthropologists play games with people from primitive cultures, biologists use games to explain the evolution of human language, and mathematicians exploit games to better understand social networks.
-
Games, Fixed Points and Mathematical Economics (C. Ewald)
This book gives the reader access to the mathematical techniques involved and goes on to apply fixed point theorems to proving the existence of equilibria for economics and for co-operative and noncooperative games.
:
|
|