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Burkhard C. Schipper

Researcher at University of California, Davis

Publications -  121
Citations -  2068

Burkhard C. Schipper is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cournot competition & Repeated game. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 118 publications receiving 1862 citations. Previous affiliations of Burkhard C. Schipper include University of California & University of Bonn.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A canonical model for interactive unawareness

TL;DR: It is shown that this generalized state-space model arises naturally if states consist of maximally consistent sets of formulas in an appropriate logical formulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Unawareness and Rationalizable Behavior

TL;DR: This work defines generalized extensive-form games which allow for mutual unawareness of actions, and defines a new variant of this solution concept, prudent rationalizability, which refines the set of outcomes induced by extensive- form rationalizable strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Unawareness and Rationalizable Behavior

TL;DR: The authors define generalized extensive-form games which allow for asymmetric awareness of actions, and extend Pearce's notion of extensive form rationalizability to this setting, explore its properties, and prove existence.
Posted Content

Ambiguity and Social Interaction

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a non-technical account of ambiguity in strategic games and show how it may be applied to economics and social sciences, where optimistic and pessimistic responses to ambiguity are formally modelled.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unawareness, Beliefs, and Speculative Trade

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define a generalized state-space model with interactive unawareness and probabilistic beliefs and show that the common prior assumption is too weak to rule out speculative trade in all states, and prove a generalized "no-speculative-trade" theorem according to which there can not be common certainty of strict preference to trade.