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LSE Events | Tim Roughgarden | Game Theory Through the Computational Lens 

LSE
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The fields of computer science and game theory both trace their roots to the first half of the 20th century, with the work of Turing, von Neumann, Nash, and others. Fast forwarding to the present, there are now many fruitful points of contact between these two fields. Game theory plays an important role in 21st-century computer science applications, ranging from social networks to routing in the Internet. The flow of ideas also travels in the other direction, with computer science offering a number of tools to reason about economic problems in novel ways. For example, computational complexity theory sheds new light on the “bounded rationality” of decision-makers. Approximation guarantees, originally developed to analyse fast heuristic algorithms, can be usefully applied to Nash equilibria. Computationally efficient algorithms are an essential ingredient to modern, large-scale auction designs. In this lecture, Tim Roughgarden will survey the key ideas behind these connections and their implications.
Tim Roughgarden is a Professor in the Computer Science and (by courtesy) Management Science and Engineering Departments, Stanford University, as well as a Visiting Professor in the Department of Mathematics at LSE.
Martin Anthony (@MartinHGAnthony) is Professor of Mathematics and Head of Department of Mathematics at LSE.
The Department of Mathematics (@LSEMaths) is internationally recognised for its teaching and research in the fields of discrete mathematics, game theory, financial mathematics and operations research.

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3 дек 2017

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Комментарии : 8   
@arianazin5419
@arianazin5419 4 года назад
He's really a genius, both in the subjects and in speaking about them.
@dongweiwu961
@dongweiwu961 4 года назад
Tim's lectures are always fascinating. Love it.
@Pr0tagoras
@Pr0tagoras 6 лет назад
Fantastic lecture, a fun mix of CS and Game theory. I did spot one tiny mistake at 34:30, Austria borders 8 countries not 7. It doesn't change the argument because the country is fully enclosed between Austria and Switzerland, but no one should forget cute and fluffy little Liechtenstein.
@wanyizhu1548
@wanyizhu1548 6 лет назад
Fantastic lecture!
@shymaaarafat1342
@shymaaarafat1342 4 года назад
In his answer to the 1st question If Quantum computing now can solve the factoring problem efficiently, does that mean it collapses all the depended on its hardness like Encryption RSA for example? (I'm not familiar or up to date on Quantum Computing)
@forheuristiclifeksh7836
@forheuristiclifeksh7836 2 месяца назад
1:00
@yoshiyuki1732ify
@yoshiyuki1732ify 2 года назад
The virus and pandemic might come with high order polynomials. Is that why 3/4 theorem is not working now?
@mattlesnikoski1216
@mattlesnikoski1216 4 года назад
Less people die on 280
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