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Teoría Evolutiva de Juegos×Equilibrio de Nash Bayesiano×
CampoTeoría de juegosTeoría de juegos
FamiliaMachine learningMachine learning
Año de origen19731967
Autor originalJohn Maynard Smith, George PriceJohn Harsanyi
Tipoalgorithmalgorithm
Fuente seminalSmith, J. M., & Price, G. R. (1973). The logic of animal conflict. Nature, 246(5427), 15-18. DOI ↗Harsanyi, J. C. (1967). Games with incomplete information played by Bayesian players, Parts I, II, and III. Management Science, 14(3), 159-182. DOI ↗
AliasESS, Evolutionarily Stable Strategy, Replicator DynamicsBNE, Perfect Bayesian Equilibrium, Type-Contingent Equilibrium
Relacionados44
ResumenEvolutionary Game Theory applies game-theoretic reasoning to biological evolution and social dynamics, where populations of agents with different strategies interact repeatedly. Introduced by John Maynard Smith and George Price in 1973, the framework uses the concept of Evolutionarily Stable Strategies (ESS) to identify strategy distributions that cannot be invaded by mutant strategies. Replicator dynamics describe how strategy frequencies evolve over time when reproduction is proportional to payoff success.Bayesian Nash Equilibrium (BNE) extends Nash Equilibrium to games with incomplete information, where players lack full knowledge of others' payoff functions. Introduced by John Harsanyi in 1967, BNE models strategic interaction under uncertainty by representing unknown payoffs as players' private types drawn from a probability distribution. Equilibrium is found by solving for type-contingent strategies that are best responses to all possible type realizations.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Evolutionary Game Theory · Bayesian Nash Equilibrium. Recuperado el 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare