Playing For Real Binmore Pdf Creator
I'm using PDF Creator on Windows 7 and am having problems generating some PDFs from the command line that I don't when using the GUI. I am using the following command, and my purpose is to use the command line to generate output PDF directly without user interaction in GUI.
You are here... Set action buttons in a form | PDF form field basics | PDF form field properties | PDF barcode form fields |
This document explains how to set action buttons in a PDF form in Acrobat DC. (If you are looking for information on PDF form field basics, PDF form field properties, or PDF barcode form fields, click the appropriate link above. To explore the common questions on forms, see PDF Forms FAQ.)
Buttons are most commonly associated withforms, but you can add them to any document. Buttons can open afile, play a sound or movie clip, submit data to a web server, andmuch more. When deciding on how to initiate an action, rememberthat buttons offer the following capabilities that links and bookmarks donot:
A button can activate a single action or a series of actions.
A button can change appearance in response to mouse actions.
A button can be easily copied across many pages.
Mouse actions can activate different button actions. For example, Mouse Down (a click), Mouse Up (releasing after a click), Mouse Enter (moving the pointer over the button), and Mouse Exit (moving the pointer away from the button) can all start a different action for the same button.
Buttons are an easy, intuitive way to let users initiate an action in PDF documents. Buttons can have a combination of labels and icons to lead users through a series of actions or events by changing as the mouse is moved. For example, you can create buttons with “Play,” “Pause,” and “Stop” labels and appropriate icons. Then you can set actions for these buttons to play, pause, and stop a movie clip. You can select any combination of mouse behaviors for a button and specify any combination of actions for a mouse behavior.
Make sure you are in edit mode by selecting Tools > Prepare Form, and then select Button in the toolbar. Your curser becomes a cross hair.
- On the page, click where you want to add the button tocreate a button with the default size. For a custom size button,drag a rectangle to define the size of the button.
- Double-click the button field, and then specify a name,tool tip text, and other common properties.
- Click the Appearance tab, and then specify options todetermine the button appearance on the page. Remember, if you selecta background color, you are not able to see through to any imagesbehind the button. The text options affect the label you specifyin the Options tab, not the button name in the General tab.
Note:
If Enable Right-To-Left Language Options is selectedin the International panel of the Preferences dialog box, the Appearancetab includes options for changing the digit style and text directionfor buttons.
- Click the Options tab, and select options to determinehow labels and icons appear on the button.
- Click the Actions tab. Specify options to determine whathappens when the button is clicked, such as jumping to a differentpage or playing a media clip.
Note:
If you’re creating a set of buttons, youcan snap the object to grid lines or guides.
To preview and test the button, click Preview at the right-end of the toolbar. Once you are done, you can either click Edit to return to the Prepare Form tool, or click the cross icon at the right-end of the toolbar to close the tool.
When you distribute a form, Acrobat automatically checks the form. If it doesn’t find a submit button, it adds a Submit Form button to the document message bar. Users can click the Submit Form button to send completed forms back to you. If you don’t plan to use the Submit Form button created by Acrobat, you can add a custom submit button to your form.
If you are not in form editing mode, choose Tools > Prepare Form.
Using the Button tool , drag across the area where you want the button to appear. Double-click the button and set options in the General and Options tabs.
In the Options tab, choose an option in the Layout menu for the button label, icon image, or both. Do one or both of the following:
Type text in the Label box to identify the button as a submit button.
Click Choose Icon and either type the path to an image file or click Browse and locate the image file you want to use.
In the Actions tab, choose Submit A Form in the Select Action menu, and then click Add.
- In the Submit Form Selectionsdialog box, do one of the following:
To collect form data on a server, type the location in the Enter a URL for this link box. For example, http://www.[domain]/[folder]/[subfolder]/ for an Internet address or [server][folder][subfolder] for a location on a local network.
To collect form data as attachments to email, type mailto: followed by the email address. For example, mailto:nobody@adobe.com.
Select options for Export Format, Field Selection, and Date Options, and click OK.
To preview and test the button, click Preview at the right-end of the toolbar. Once you are done, you can either click Edit to return to the Prepare Form tool, or click the cross icon at the right-end of the toolbar to close the tool.
Note:
If the data returns in FDF or XFDF format, the serverURL must end with the #FDF suffix—for example, http://myserver/cgi-bin/myscript#FDF.
The following options are available in the SubmitForms Selections dialog box:
Specifies the URL to collect the form data.
Returns the user input without sending back the underlying PDF file. You can select options to include Field Data, Comments, and Incremental Changes To The PDF.
Note:
Selecting the option for incremental changes is useful for receiving digital signatures in a way that is easily read and reconstructed by a server.
Returns the form in Hypertext Markup Language.
Returns the user input as an XML file. You can include Commentswith the field data or just the field data.
Returns the entire PDF file with the user input.
Specifies what fields are returned. To receive only some of the completed field data, select Only These, click Select Fields, and select which fields to include or exclude in the Field Selection dialog box.
For example, you might use this to exclude some calculated or duplicate fields that appear in the form for the user’s benefit but which do not add new information.
Standardizes the format for dates that the user enters.
A button can have a label, an icon, or both. You can change how the button appears in each mouse state (Up, Down, and Rollover). For example, you could create a button that has a “Home” label until the pointer is moved over the button, when it might have a “Click to return to home page” label.
You can make button icons from any file format that Acrobat can display, including PDF, JPEG, GIF, and other image formats. For whichever format you select, the entire page is used, so if you want to use only a portion of a page as an icon, you need to crop the image or page before carrying out this procedure. The smallest allowable PDF page size is 1-by-1 inch (2.54-by-2.54 cm). If you want the icon to appear smaller than 1-by-1 inch, scale it to fit the size of the box drawn with the button tool. Clicking Advanced in the Options tab of the Button Properties dialog box lets you determine how a button icon is scaled to fit inside a button.
A. Label only B. Icon only C. Icon top,label bottom D. Label top, icon bottom E. Icon left,label right F. Label left, icon right G. Labelover icon
If you are not in form editing mode, choose Tools > Prepare Form.
- Select the Button field, and then do any of the following:
To edit the properties for the button field,double-click the button.
To change the appearance of buttons, use the appearanceoptions in the Appearance tab of the Button Properties dialogbox.
To align, center, or distribute the button withother form fields, or to resize or duplicate the button, right-clickthe button, and then choose an option from the context menu.
Close all opened dialog boxes, if any. Click the cross icon at the right-end of the Prepare Form toolbar to close the tool.
If you are not in form editing mode, choose Tools > Prepare Form.
- Double-click an existing button, and then click the Optionstab in the Button Properties dialog box.
- For Layout, choose the type of label display you want.(For information on scaling button icons, see the next procedure.)
- For Behavior, specify the display of the button whenclicked.
- To define the label or icon that appears on the button,do the following:
If a label option is selected from the Layout menu, type the text in the Label box.
If an icon option is selected from the Layout menu, click Choose Icon, click Browse, and select the file. (Click Clear to remove the selected icon.)
Close all opened dialog boxes, if any. Click the cross icon at the right-end of the Prepare Form toolbar to close the tool.
Keeps the appearance of the button the same.
Specifies appearances for the Up, Down, and Rollover statesof the mouse. Select an option under State, and then specify a labelor icon option:
Determines what the button looks like when the mouse button isn’t clicked.
Determines what the button looks like when the mouse is clickedon the button, but before it’s released.
Determines what the button looks like when the pointer isheld over the button.
Highlights the button border.
Reverses the dark and light shades of the button.
If you are not in form editing mode, choose Tools > Prepare Form.
- Double-click an existing button to open the ButtonProperties dialog box.
Click the Options tab, select one of the icon options from the Layout menu, and then click Advanced.
Note:
The Advanced button isn’t available if you choose Label Only from the Layout menu.
Scales the icon as defined regardless of its size inrelation to the button size.
Preserves the original size of the icon; the button bordercrops the icon if it doesn’t fit. If Never is selected, scale optionsaren’t available.
Scales the icon as defined only if it is larger thanthe button.
Scales the icon as defined only if it is smaller thanthe button.
From the Scale menu, select whether to scale the icon proportionally. If the icon is scaled nonproportionally, it may be skewed.
To make sure that either the top and bottom or left and right sides of the icon are flush against the button edges, select Fit To Bounds.
To define where the icon is placed inside the button, drag the slider arrows. Icon placement is defined according to the percentage of space preserved between the icon and the left field boundary, and between the icon and the bottom field boundary. The default setting (50, 50) places the icon in the middle of a field. You can click Reset at any time to revert to the default placement setting.
To preview and test the button, click Preview at the right-end of the toolbar. Once you are done, you can either click Edit to return to the Prepare Form tool, or click the cross icon at the right-end of the toolbar to close the tool.
Insome cases, you may want the button area to be invisible until thepointer moves over it. By alternately showing and hiding a button,you can create interesting visual effects in a document. For example,when you move a pointer over a city on a map, a detail map of thecity could be displayed, and the detail map could disappear whenthe pointer moves away from the city.
A. Pointer not over button area B. Pointerenters button area C. Pointerexits button area
If you are not in form editing mode, choose Tools > Prepare Form.
Using the Button tool , drag across the area where you want the pop-up button to appear. For example, if the PDF file contains a map of France, drag across the area where you want a detailed map of Paris to pop up.
Double-click the button, and then click the Options tab and choose Icon Only from the Layout menu.
Choose Push from the Behavior menu, and then choose Rollover from the State list.
Click Choose Icon, and then click Browse. Select the file type from the File Of Type, navigate to the location of the image file, and then double-click the file. In this example, you would select a map of Paris. Click OK to accept the previewed image as the button.
Click the Appearance tab. If needed, deselect Border Color and Fill Color, and then click Close.
If you are in the edit mode, click Preview. The image field you defined appears as the pointer rolls over the button area and disappears when it exits.
Note:
If you want the image to be larger thanthe rollover area, or if you want the image to be in a differentlocation than the image button that pops up, use the Show/Hide AField action. First, you specify an icon for the button that willbe shown and hidden. Next, you create a second button that actsas a hot spot when the mouse rolls over it. You do not assign anicon for the appearance of the second button. Instead, you use theActions tab to show the first button when the pointer enters thesecond button, and hide the first button when the pointer exits.
Once you are done, you can either click Edit to return to the Prepare Form tool, or click the cross icon at the right-end of the toolbar to close the tool.
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On this page we have collected links of interest. Some of these are provided by the Game Theory Society, some by other websites. If you find anything missing that might be of interest for members of the Game Theory Society, please contact the society with your suggestion.
Journal published by the American Institute of Mathematical Sciences
Journal published by Birkhäuser
Journal published by World Scientific Publishing
An open access journal devoted to Game Theory.
Working paper listing service run by Vito Fragnelli
Resources for research on socio-economic networks and groups
arXiv is an e-print service in the fields of physics, mathematics, non-linears science, computer science, quantitative biology and statistics.
Game theory book listing run by Mike Shor
A collection of lecture notes, articles from the popular press, and examples of game theory in popular culture.
Online experiments provided by Ariel Rubinstein
A collection of web-based experiments, provided by Charles Holt, to accompany his experimental economics text, Markets, Games, and Strategic Behavior.
A modeling framework designed to simulate the evolution of a population of agents who play symmetric 2-player game and, from time to time, are given the opportunity to revise their strategy. Developed by Luis & Segismundo Izquierdo and Bill Sandholm.
This algorithm by Luis & Segismundo Izquierdo and Bill Sandholm generate phase portraits of evolutionary dynamics, as well as data for the analysis of their phase portraits of evolutionary dynamics, as well as data for the analysis of their equilibria using exact arithmetic.
Evoplex is a free, open-source and non-profit platform for agent-based modeling on networks. It was designed to tackle problems in evolutionary game theory and network science.
This algorithm by Rahul Savani enumerates all equilibria of a bimatrix game.
Diagrams for evolutionary game dynamics, by Bill Sandholm, Emin Dokumaci, and Franciso Franchetti.
Gambit is a library of game theory software and tools for the construction and analysis of finite extensive and strategic games.
GTE is web-based software for the interactive creation and equilibrium analysis of games in extensive and strategic form.
by Jean-Pierre Langlois from San Francisco State University is a Windows application for creating and analyzing games.
Free iOS apps to provide students with practice in a variety of solution concepts (from Iterated Dominance to refinements of PBE in signaling games), by Peter Eso, Oxford University.
lrslib is a self-contained ANSI C implementation as a callable library of the reverse search algorithm for vertex enumeration/convex hull problems by David Avis.
This toolbox for evolutionary game theory is implemented in Matlab and is designed to facilitate the implementation of any game with different evolutionary dynamics. Here is a PDF file with detailed documentation.
Playing For Real Binmore Pdf
Transferable utility game theory Matlab toolboxes maintained by the Santiago Game Theory Group.
Zurich Toolbox for Readymade Economic Experiments
- GAMENET the European Network for Game Theory is a project funded bythe European Union ( COST Action CA 16228) to connect game theoristsworking in academia and in industry in different countries.
Job openings:
The Higher School of Economics International Laboratory of Game Theory and Decision Making in St.Petersburg, Russia invites applications for postdoctoral research positions in the fields of Game Theory, Computational Economics, and Discrete Mathematics.
The job involves:
— working under the direct supervision of Prof. Herve Moulin, lab’s academic supervisor,
— participants are encouraged to pursue their own research in parallel with working on research projects of Game Theory and Decision Making lab in two broad areas:
o market design & mechanism design
o game theory: strategic, algorithmic, and experimental
— writing research papers for international peer-reviewed journals in co-authorship with the members of the Lab,
— participation in organization of the events and other contribution to the Lab’s development,
— public presentations of candidate’s own research to the researchers in the field and the broader academic community,
— some teaching is encouraged, though not required.
Requirements:
— a PhD from an international research university in such fields as: Economics, Theoretical Computer Science or Mathematics,
— a strong background in Game Theory, Microeconomics, Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical computer science,
— heavy emphasis on high-quality research,
— ability to work in a team,
— fluent English,
— relevant experience is an asset although not required.
General conditions for Post-Doctoral Research positions can be found here https://iri.hse.ru/faq_pd
Appointments will normally be made for one year. They assume internationally competitive compensation and other benefits including medical insurance.
A CV, research statement and two letters of recommendation should be submitted directly via online application form https://www.hse.ru/expresspolls/poll/229374241.html by February 15, 2019. Please note that direct applications to the hiring laboratory may not be reviewed.
About HSE
HSE is a young, dynamic, fast-growing Russian research university providing unique research opportunities. For more information about HSE, please visit our university portal http://hse.ru/en, and the webpage of the Lab: International Laboratory of Game Theory and Decision Making http://scem.spb.hse.ru/en/ilgt/ , or contact the following members of the Lab:
–Herve Moulin (Herve.Moulin@glasgow.ac.uk) and Anna Bogomolnaia (Anna.Bogomolnaia@glasgow.ac.uk), the academic supervisors
–Fedor Sandomirskiy (sandomirski@yandex.ru), the administrative head
–Xenia Adaeva (xadaeva@hse.ru), the manager.
To apply please follow the International Faculty Recruitment website link https://www.hse.ru/expresspolls/poll/229374241.html
The Technical University of Munich (Germany) is looking for PhD students and post-docs working in a new project on randomized collective choice led by Prof. Felix Brandt.
Prospective candidates should have the ability to work rigorously on well-defined problems and be enthusiastic about being involved in a new and dynamic area of research. They will assist in teaching courses on Algorithmic Game Theory and/or Computational Social Choice. Salary (for both PhD students and post-docs) is according to German tariff E13 and will be around 45k Euro per year. TUM is an international top university and host to the most acclaimed computer science department in Germany (http://www.in.tum.de/en/for-prospective-students/good-reasons/top-ranked-programs/).
Applications should be submitted by email to brandtf@in.tum.de using the subject line “CCL” (Collective Choice Lotteries).
Please enclose a curriculum vitae including a complete list of publications and a sample publication (e.g., a Master’s thesis).
The submission deadline is April 30th, 2018.
Ikerbasque Research Fellow Positions in Economics
Four research groups in the field of Economics of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) are pleased to support promising research candidates in their applications for an Ikerbasque Research Fellow position (see PDF with further information, andhttp://www.ikerbasque.net)
- 5 year contracts
- PhD degree taken Jan 2004 – Dec 2011
- Support letter from the host group is mandatory
Posted on February 28, 2014.
Deadline March 31, 2014, 13:00h CET
3 Postdoc positions in algorithmic game theory at the University of Oxford.
Informal inquiries to Elias Koutsoupias (elias@cs.ox.ac.uk).
Posted on September 11, 2013. Deadline October 10, 2013
Postdoctoral fellowship at Paris School of Economics for 1 year or 4th-year PHD in economics or computer science
Posted on June 5, 2012. Deadline June 30, 2012
Lectureship in Mathematics, London School of Economics, for candidates with research interests in mathematical or computational aspects of Game Theory.
Posted on December 15, 2011. Deadline January 30, 2012
Lectureship in Mathematics, London School of Economics, for candidates with research interests in mathematical or computational aspects of Game Theory.
Posted on December 15, 2011. Deadline January 30, 2012
Postdoctoral Positions in Game Theory and Rationality, Jerusalem
Posted on March 21, 2011. Deadline May 31, 2011
Two Lectureships in Mathematics, London School of Economics
Posted on March 15, 2011. Deadline March 24, 2011
We especially welcome suggestions for additions to the following list of books related to game theory, organized roughly be category:
Introductory:
- Charalambos D. Aliprantis and Subir K. Chakrabarti
- Games and Decision Making
- Oxford University Press, 2000
- Ken Binmore
- Playing for Real: A Text on Game Theory
- Oxford university press, 2007
- Avinash K. Dixit and Barry Nalebuff
- The Art of Strategy: A Game Theorist’s Guide to Success in Business & Life
- WW Norton & Company, 2008
- Avinash Dixit and Susan Skeath
- Games of Strategy
- WW Norton & Company, 1999
- James W. Friedman
- Game Theory with Applications to Economics
- Oxford University Press, 1986
- Robert Gibbons
- Game Theory for Applied Economists
- Princeton University Press, 1992
- Kevin Leyton-Brown and Yoav Shoham
- Essentials of Game Theory: A Concise Multidisciplinary Introduction
- Morgan & Claypool Publishers, 2008
- Hervé Moulin
- Game Theory for the Social Sciences
- NYU press, 1986
- Martin J. Osborne
- An Introduction to Game Theory
- Oxford University Press, 2004
- Stephen Schecter and Herbert Gintis
- Game Theory in Action: An Introduction to Classical and Evolutionary Models
- Princeton University Press, 2016
- Steven Tadelis
- Game Theory: An Introduction
- Princeton University Press, 2013
- Joel Watson
- Strategy: An Introduction to Game Theory
- W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2001
Advanced:
- Edited by Robert Aumann and Sergiu Hart (Vol. 1-3) and Peyton Young and Shmuel Zamir (Vol. 4)
- Handbook of Game Theory with Economic Applications
- Elsevier, Vol. 1, 1992; Vol. 2, 1994; Vol. 3, 2002; Vol. 4, 2014
- Drew Fudenberg and Jean Tirole
- Game Theory
- The MIT Press, 1991
- Michael Maschler, Eilon Solan, and Shmuel Zamir
- Game Theory
- Cambridge University Press, 2013
- Roger B. Myerson
- Game Theory: Analysis of Conflict
- Harvard University Press, 1991
- Guillermo Owen
- Game Theory
- Academic Press, 1995
- Martin J. Osborne and Ariel Rubinstein
- A Course in Game Theory
- The MIT press, 1994
- Klaus Ritzberger
- Foundations of Non-Cooperative Game Theory
- Oxford University Press, 2002
- Eric van Damme
- Stability and Perfection of Nash Equilibria
- Springer-Verlag, 1987
Algorithmic Game Theory:
- Edited by Noam Nisan, Tim Roughgarden, Éva Tardos, and Vijay V. Vazirani
- Algorithmic Game Theory
- Cambridge University Press, 2007
Collections:
- Robert J. Aumann
- Collected Papers, Vol.1 and 2
- The MIT Press, 2000
- Edited by Harold W. Kuhn
- Classics in Game Theory
- Princeton University Press, 1997
- Edited by Sergiu Hart and Abraham Neyman
- Game and Economic Theory: Selected Contributions in Honor of Robert J. Aumann
- University of Michigan Press, 1995
- John F. Nash, Jr.
- Essays on Game Theory
- Edward Elgar, 1996
- Reinhard Selten
- Game Theory and Economic Behaviour: Selected Essays
- Edward Elgar Publications, 1999
Bargaining:
- Abhinay Muthoo
- Bargaining Theory With Applications
- Cambridge University Press, 1999
- Martin J. Osborne and Ariel Rubinstein
- Bargaining and Markets
- Academic Press, 1990
Contract Theory:
- Patrick Bolton and Mathias Dewatripont
- Contract Theory
- The MIT Press, 2005
- Bernard Salanié
- The Economics of Contracts: A Primer
- The MIT Press, 2005
Environmental:
- Edited by Carlo Carraro and Vito Fragnelli
- Game Practice and the Environment
- Edward Elgar, 2004
Industrial Organization:
- H. Scott Bierman and Luis Fernandez
- Game Theory with Economic Applications
- Addison-Wesley, 1998
- Luis C. Corchon
- Theories of Imperfectly Competitive Markets
- Springer Science & Business Media, 2013
- Douglas Gale
- Strategic Foundations of General Equilibrium: Dynamic Matching and Bargining Games
- Cambridge University Press, 2000
- John Sutton
- Technology and Market Structure Theory and History
- The MIT Press, 1998
- Xavier Vives
- Oligopoly Pricing Old Ideas and New Tools
- The MIT Press, 2001
Information Economics:
- Edited by Peter Diamond and Michael Rothschild
- Uncertainty in Economics: Readings and Exercises
- Academic Press, 1989
- Jack Hirshleifer and John G. Riley
- The Analytics of Uncertainty and Information
- Cambridge University Press, 1992
- Eric Rasmusen
- Games and Information : An Introduction to Game Theory
- Blackwell Publications, 2001
Law:
- Douglas G. Baird, Robert H. Gertner, and Randal C. Picker
- Game Theory and the Law
- Harvard University Press, 1998
Management & Business:
- Edited by Kalyan Chatterjee and William F. Samuelson
- Game Theory and Business Applications
- Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2001
- Avinash K. Dixit and Barry Nalebuff
- The Art of Strategy: A Game Theorist’s Guide to Success in Business & Life
- WW Norton & Company, 2008
- Avinash K. Dixit and Barry J. Nalebuff
- Thinking Strategically: The Competitive Edge in Business, Politics, and Everyday Life
- WW Norton & Company, 1993
- Engelbert Dockner (Editor), Steffen Jorgensen, Ngo Van Long, and Gerhard Sorger
- Differential Games in Economics and Management Science
- Cambridge University Press, 2000
- Melvin Dresher
- The Mathematics of Games of Strategy: Theory and Applications
- Dover Publications, 1981
- Prajit K. Dutta
- Strategies and Games Theory and Practice
- The MIT Press, 1999
- Aviad Heifetz
- Game Theory: Interactive Strategies in Economics and Management
- Cambridge University Press, 2012
- Sarit Kraus
- Strategic Negotiation in Multiagent Environments
- The MIT Press, 2001
- Rohit Prasad
- Game Sutra – Rescuing Game Theory from the Game Theorists
- The Sage Press, 2019
Philosophy, Sociology & Literature:
- Robert Axelrod
- The Evolution of Cooperation
- Basic Books, 1984
- Ken Binmore
- Game Theory and the Social Contract
- The MIT Press, 1998
- Steven J. Brams
- Game Theory and the Humanities: Bridging Two Worlds
- The MIT Press, 2011
- Steven J. Brams
- Theory of Moves
- Cambridge University Press, 1994
- Michael Suk-Young Chwe
- Rational Ritual: Culture, Coordination, and Common Knowledge
- Princeton University Press, 2001
- Alexander Mehlmann, David Kramer (Translator)
- The Game’s Afoot! Game Theory in Myth and Paradox
- American Mathematical Society, 2000
Political Science:
- Robert H. Bates, Avner Greif, Margaret Levi, and Jean-Laurent
- Analytic Narratives
- Princeton University Press, 1998
- Robert D. Cooter
- The Strategic Constitution
- Princeton University Press, 2000
- Edited by David A. Lake and Robert Powell
- Strategic Choice and International Relations
- Princeton University Press, 1999
- Barry O’Neill
- Honor, Symbols and War
- 1999 University of Michigan Press, 1999
- Robert Powell
- In the Shadow of Power: States and Strategies in International Politics
- Princeton University Press, 1999
- Thomas C. Schelling
- The Strategy of Conflict
- Harvard University Press, 1980
- Martin Shubik
- A Game-Theoretic Approach to Political Economy
- The MIT Press, 1987
- Martin Shubik
- Game Theory in the Social Sciences: Concepts and Solutions
- The MIT Press, 1985
Social Choice and Welfare:
Social Choice and Welfare
- Allan M. Feldman and Roberto Serrano
- Welfare Economics and Social Choice Theory
- Springer, 2006
- Jerry S. Kelly
- Social Choice Theory: An Introduction
- Springer Science & Business Media, 2013
- Hervé Moulin
- Fair Division and Collective Welfare
- The MIT Press, 2003
Sport:
- Ignacio Palacios-Huerta
- Beautiful Game Theory: How Soccer Can Help Economics
- Princeton University Press, 2014
- Tilman Börgers
- An Introduction to the Theory of Mechanism Design
- Oxford University Press, 2015
- Pierre-André Chiappori
- Matching with Transfers: The Economics of Love and Marriage
- Princeton University Press, 2017
- Alfred Galichon
- Optimal Transport Methods in Economics
- Princeton University Press, 2016
- Paul Klemperer
- Auctions: Theory and Practice
- Princeton University Press, 2004
- Vijay Krishna
- Auction Theory
- Academic Press, 2009
- Paul Robert Milgrom
- Putting Auction Theory to Work
- Cambridge University Press, 2004
- Alvin E. Roth
- Who Gets What —and Why: The New Economics of Matchmaking and Market Design
- Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015
- Alvin E. Roth and Marilda Sotomayor
- Two-sided Matching: A Study in Game-theoretic Modeling and Analysis
- Econometric Society Monographs, 1990
- Rakesh V. Vohra
- Mechanism Design: A Linear Programming Approach
- Cambridge University Press, 2011
- Hervé Moulin
- Axioms of Cooperative Decision Making
- Cambridge university press, 1991
- Bezalel Peleg and Peter Sudhölter
- Introduction to the Theory of Cooperative Games
- 2004 Springer, 2004
- Edited by Alvin E. Roth
- The Shapley Value: Essays in Honor of Lloyd S. Shapley
- Cambridge University Press, 1988
- Ken Binmore
- Does Game Theory Work? The Bargaining Challenge
- The MIT Press, 2007
- Colin F. Camerer
- Behavioral Game Theory: Experiments in Strategic Interactions
- Princeton University Press, 2003
- Douglas D. Davis and Charles A. Holt
- Experimental Economics
- Princeton University Press, 1993
- Edited by Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, and Herbert Gintis
- Foundations of Human Sociality: Economic Experiments and Ethnographic Evidence from Fifteen Small-Scale Societies
- Oxford University Press, 2004
- Charles A. Holt
- Markets, Games, & Strategic Behavior
- Boston, MA: Pearson Addison Wesley, 2007
- Edited by John H. Kagel and Alvin E. Roth
- The Handbook of Experimental Economics
- Princeton University Press, 2016
- Atanasios Mitropoulos
- Economic Learning, Experiments And The Limits To Information
- Edward Elgar, 2004
- Edited by Charles R. Plott and Vernon L. Smith
- Handbook of Experimental Economics Results
- Elsevier, 2008
- Carlos Alós-Ferrer and Klaus Ritzberger
- The Theory of Extensive Form Games
- Springer Series in Game Theory, 2016
- Ken Binmore
- Essays on the Foundations of Game Theory
- B. Blackwell, 1990
- John C. Harsanyi and Reinhard Selten
- A General Theory of Equilibrium Selection in Games
- The MIT Press, 1988
- Andres Perea
- Epistemic Game Theory – Reasoning and Choice
- Cambridge University Press, 2012
- Andres Perea
- Rationality in Extensive Form Games (Theory and Decision Library, Series C, Game Theory, Mathematical Programming, and Operations Research, Vol. 29)
- Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2001
- Klaus Ritzberger
- Foundations of Non-Cooperative Game Theory
- Oxford University Press, 2002
- John Von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern
- Theory of Games and Economic Behavior
- Princeton University Press, 1944
- Mary-Ann Dimand and Robert W. Dimand
- The History of Game Theory: From the Beginnings to 1945
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