Nash Equilibrium
sort by: Relevancy | Title | Rating try advanced search for more options
-
Examples Of Autonomous Linear Dynamical Systems, Finite-State Discrete-Time Markov Chain, Numerical Integration Of Continuous System, High Order Linear Dynamical Systems, Mechanical Systems, Linearization Near Equilibrium Point, Linearization Along Trajectory
-
After mentioning some legal implications of chirality, the discussion of configuration concludes using esomeprazole as an example of three general methods for producing single enantiomers. Conformational isomerism is more subtle because isomers differ only by rotation about single bonds, which requires careful physico-chemical consideration of energies and their relation to equilibrium and rate constants. Conformations have their own...more
-
Building on the general equilibrium setup solved in the last week, this lecture looks in depth at the relationships between productivity, patience, prices, allocations, and nominal and real interest rates. The solutions are given to three of Fisher's famous examples: What happens to interest rates when people become more or less patient? What happens when they expect to receive windfall riches sometime in the future? And, what happens...more
-
Breeding strategies differ both among males and females of the same species as well as among different species. The difference in breeding strategies among members of the same species can usually be linked to frequency dependence. If the species is at evolutionary equilibrium, the relative fitnesses of these different strategies will be identical. Differing strategies have been found at the level of the gamete as well as at the level of...more
-
This lecture is a continuation of an analogue to Newton's law: τ= lα. While previous problems examined situations in which τ is not zero, this time the focus is on extreme cases in which there is no torque at all. If there is no torque, α is zero and the angular velocity is constant. The lecture starts with a simple example of a seesaw and moves on to discuss a collection of objects that are somehow subject to a variety of forces but...more
-
Professor Sylvia Ceyer begins by adding and subtracting half-cell reactions (a continuation of her prior lecture on oxidation/reduction). The Nernst Equation is introduced, which can be used to determine the equilibrium reduction potential of a half cell in an electrochemical cell.
-
In this lecture, Professor Lewin displays how the conservation of mechanical energy can be used to derive the equation of motion for simple harmonic oscillators (SHO). In doing so he covers gravitational potential energy, equilibrium points where the net force is zero, parabolic potential energy, and circular potential energy.
-
In order for Social Security to work, people have to believe there's some possibility that the world will last forever, so that each old generation will have a young generation to support it. The overlapping generations model, invented by Allais and Samuelson but here augmented with land, represents such a situation. Financial equilibrium can again be reduced to general equilibrium. At first glance it would seem that the model requires a...more
-
-
Using theoretically quasi-static and/or reversible processes to stay pretty much at equilibrium.
-
-
The difference between macrostates and microstates. Thermodynamic equilibrium.




