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Quarterly Newsletter


Dear reader,

This is the inaugural newsletter of the Game Theory Society. We intend that it will become a regular affair. We are open to suggestions about what items to include. For now, we include a link to the Society web page that records Game Theory conferences happening around the world and two recent posts. We urge you to use the conference announcement form on the web site to publicize Game Theory conferences you may be hosting.

Finally, two of our members have marked the new year with books on Game Theory. George Mailath has just published Modeling Strategic Behavior. This book is aimed at first year graduate students. The second is Divine Games by Steven J. Brams. It is a game theoretic analysis of the interaction between a mortal and an omnipotent being.

Suggestions for items to be included in future issues of the newsletter are welcome.

Enjoy!

Conferences

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GEB Special issue in memory of Joe Halpern

Categories: Calls for Papers - Journal Submissions

GEB will publish a special issue dedicated to the memory of Joseph Y. Halpern. With his immense energy and broad intellectual curiosity, Joe was instrumental in connecting the game theory community to a wide variety of fields including logic, multi-agent systems, distributed computing, artificial intelligence, cryptography, linguistics, and philosophy. He was the spiritus rector behind the biannual multidisciplinary TARK conferences …

50 years of "Agreeing to Disagree"

Categories: Calls for Papers - Journal Submissions

Special issue of Games and Economic Behavior in honor of 50 years “Agreeing to Disagree” Guest editors Christina Katt-PawlowitschUniversité Paris-Panthéon-Assas, Laboratoire d’Économie Mathématique, Francechristina.pawlowitsch@assas-universite.fr Ziv HellmanBar-Ilan University, Economics, IsraelYoram MosesTechnion, Electrical Engineering, Israel Herakles PolemarchakisWarwick University, Economics, UK  Half a century after its publication, Aumann’s Agreement Theorem (“Agreeing to Disagree,” The Annals of Statistics, 1976) has not ceased to intrigue …