Popularized by movies such as "A Beautiful Mind," game theory is the mathematical modeling of strategic interaction among rational (and irrational) agents. Beyond what we call `games' in common language, such as chess, poker, soccer, etc., it includes the modeling of conflict among nations, political campaigns, competition among firms, and trading behavior in markets such as the NYSE. How could you begin to model keyword auctions, and peer to peer file-sharing networks, without accounting for the incentives of the people using them? The course will provide the basics: representing games and strategies, the extensive form (which computer scientists call game trees), Bayesian games (modeling things like auctions), repeated and stochastic games, and more. We'll include a variety of examples including classic games and a few applications.



Game Theory



Instructors: Matthew O. Jackson
Access provided by Coursera Learning Team
553,339 already enrolled
(4,790 reviews)
Skills you'll gain
Details to know

Add to your LinkedIn profile
15 assignments
See how employees at top companies are mastering in-demand skills


Earn a career certificate
Add this credential to your LinkedIn profile, resume, or CV
Share it on social media and in your performance review

There are 8 modules in this course
Introduction, overview, uses of game theory, some applications and examples, and formal definitions of: the normal form, payoffs, strategies, pure strategy Nash equilibrium, dominant strategies
What's included
11 videos2 readings2 assignments3 discussion prompts
pure and mixed strategy Nash equilibria
What's included
7 videos2 assignments
Iterative removal of strictly dominated strategies, minimax strategies and the minimax theorem for zero-sum game, correlated equilibria
What's included
6 videos2 assignments
Perfect information games: trees, players assigned to nodes, payoffs, backward Induction, subgame perfect equilibrium, introduction to imperfect-information games, mixed versus behavioral strategies.
What's included
10 videos2 assignments2 discussion prompts
Repeated prisoners dilemma, finite and infinite repeated games, limited-average versus future-discounted reward, folk theorems, stochastic games and learning.
What's included
7 videos2 assignments2 discussion prompts
General definitions, ex ante/interim Bayesian Nash equilibrium.
What's included
6 videos2 assignments
Transferable utility cooperative games, Shapley value, Core, applications.
What's included
5 videos2 assignments
The description goes here
What's included
1 assignment
Instructors



Why people choose Coursera for their career




Learner reviews
4,790 reviews
- 5 stars
71.80%
- 4 stars
22.01%
- 3 stars
3.81%
- 2 stars
1.14%
- 1 star
1.21%
Showing 3 of 4790
Reviewed on Jul 5, 2017
Course is really good. Covers a lot of content. One of the best places on the internet to learn game theory. Active discussion forum. Some more examples can be added as separate videos.
Reviewed on May 9, 2017
The course is generally good. The exercises however are not very well explained. Furthermore, it would be nice to have a pdf from the course in order to be able to study independently.
Reviewed on Feb 24, 2023
Love this course. Really interesting to learn. This subject was very problematic for me when I studied at the University and now I am pretty friendly with it thanks to the Professors of the course.
Recommended if you're interested in Social Sciences
The University of Tokyo
Stanford University
IIMA - IIM Ahmedabad
Georgia Institute of Technology

Open new doors with Coursera Plus
Unlimited access to 10,000+ world-class courses, hands-on projects, and job-ready certificate programs - all included in your subscription
Advance your career with an online degree
Earn a degree from world-class universities - 100% online
Join over 3,400 global companies that choose Coursera for Business
Upskill your employees to excel in the digital economy