Cournot competition — is an economic model used to describe an industry structure in which companies compete on the amount of output they will produce, which they decide on independently of each other and at the same time. It is named after Antoine Augustin Cournot[1] … Wikipedia
Cournot, Antoine-Augustin — born Aug. 28, 1801, Gray, France died March 31, 1877, Paris French economist and mathematician. The first economist to apply mathematics effectively to the treatment of economic questions, he made important contributions with his discussion of… … Universalium
Nash equilibrium — A solution concept in game theory Relationships Subset of Rationalizability, Epsilon equilibrium, Correlated equilibrium Superset of Evolutionarily stable strategy … Wikipedia
Antoine Augustin Cournot — Born 28 August 1801(1801 08 28) Gray, Haute Saône Died 31 March 1877(1877 03 31) (aged … Wikipedia
Correlated equilibrium — A solution concept in game theory Relationships Superset of Nash equilibrium Significance Proposed by … Wikipedia
Manipulated Nash equilibrium — MAPNASH A solution concept in game theory Relationships Subset of Nash equilibrium, Subgame perfect equilibrium Significance … Wikipedia
Epsilon-equilibrium — A solution concept in game theory Relationships Superset of Nash Equilibrium Significance Used for … Wikipedia
Markov perfect equilibrium — A solution concept in game theory Relationships Subset of Subgame perfect equilibrium Significance Proposed by … Wikipedia
Coalition-proof Nash equilibrium — The concept of coalition proof Nash equilibrium applies to certain noncooperative environments in which players can freely discuss their strategies but cannot make binding commitments [1]. It emphasizes the immunization to deviations that are… … Wikipedia
Partial equilibrium — A partial equilibrium is a type of economic equilibrium, where the clearance on the market of some specific goods is obtained independently from prices and quantities demanded and supplied in other markets. In other words, the prices of all… … Wikipedia
Stackelberg competition — The Stackelberg leadership model is a strategic game in economics in which the leader firm moves first and then the follower firms move sequentially. It is named after the German economist Heinrich Freiherr von Stackelberg who published Market… … Wikipedia