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This volume is based on lectures given at the NATO Advanced Study
Institute on "Stochastic Games and Applications," which took place
at Stony Brook, NY, USA, July 1999. It gives the editors great
pleasure to present it on the occasion of L.S. Shapley's eightieth
birthday, and on the fiftieth "birthday" of his seminal paper
"Stochastic Games," with which this volume opens. We wish to thank
NATO for the grant that made the Institute and this volume
possible, and the Center for Game Theory in Economics of the State
University of New York at Stony Brook for hosting this event. We
also wish to thank the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, for
providing continuing financial support, without which this project
would never have been completed. In particular, we are grateful to
our editorial assistant Mike Borns, whose work has been
indispensable. We also would like to acknowledge the support of the
Ecole Poly tech nique, Paris, and the Israel Science Foundation.
March 2003 Abraham Neyman and Sylvain Sorin ix STOCHASTIC GAMES
L.S. SHAPLEY University of California at Los Angeles Los Angeles,
USA 1. Introduction In a stochastic game the play proceeds by steps
from position to position, according to transition probabilities
controlled jointly by the two players."
This volume is based on lectures given at the NATO Advanced Study
Institute on "Stochastic Games and Applications," which took place
at Stony Brook, NY, USA, July 1999. It gives the editors great
pleasure to present it on the occasion of L.S. Shapley's eightieth
birthday, and on the fiftieth "birthday" of his seminal paper
"Stochastic Games," with which this volume opens. We wish to thank
NATO for the grant that made the Institute and this volume
possible, and the Center for Game Theory in Economics of the State
University of New York at Stony Brook for hosting this event. We
also wish to thank the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, for
providing continuing financial support, without which this project
would never have been completed. In particular, we are grateful to
our editorial assistant Mike Borns, whose work has been
indispensable. We also would like to acknowledge the support of the
Ecole Poly tech nique, Paris, and the Israel Science Foundation.
March 2003 Abraham Neyman and Sylvain Sorin ix STOCHASTIC GAMES
L.S. SHAPLEY University of California at Los Angeles Los Angeles,
USA 1. Introduction In a stochastic game the play proceeds by steps
from position to position, according to transition probabilities
controlled jointly by the two players."
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