bibtype B - Monography
ARLID 0386716
utime 20240103201909.3
mtime 20130111235959.9
ISBN 978-3-642-24646-3
ISSN 1868-4394
SCOPUS 84885609056
DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-24647-0
title (primary) (eng) Decision Making with Imperfect Decision Makers
publisher
place Berlin
name Springer-Verlag
pub_time 2012
specification
page_count 194 s.
media_type P
edition
name Intelligent Systems Reference Library
volume_id 28
keyword decision making
keyword Bayesian decision making
keyword rationality
author (primary)
ARLID cav_un_auth*0101092
name1 Guy
name2 Tatiana Valentine
full_dept (cz) Adaptivní systémy
full_dept (eng) Department of Adaptive Systems
department (cz) AS
department (eng) AS
institution UTIA-B
full_dept Department of Adaptive Systems
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0101124
name1 Kárný
name2 Miroslav
full_dept (cz) Adaptivní systémy
full_dept Department of Adaptive Systems
department (cz) AS
department AS
institution UTIA-B
full_dept Department of Adaptive Systems
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0287657
name1 Wolpert
name2 D. H.
country US
cas_special
project
project_id GA102/08/0567
agency GA ČR
ARLID cav_un_auth*0239566
research CEZ:AV0Z1075907
abstract (eng) Prescriptive Bayesian decision making has reached its maturity and is supported by efficient, theoretically well-founded algorithms. However, experimental data shows that real decision makers choose such Bayes-optimal decisions surprisingly infrequently, often making decisions that are badly sub-optimal. So prevalent is such imperfect decision making that it should be accepted as an inherent feature of real decision makers living within interacting societies. Such societies have been investigated from an economic and game-theoretic perspective but little work has been done from the perspective of computer science, machine learning, information theory and neuroscience. The workshop Decision Making with Multiple Imperfect Decision Makers, held after the 24th Annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS 2010) was a step in bringing such alternative viewpoints to bear on the topic of understanding societies of imperfect decision makers.
reportyear 2013
RIV BB
num_of_auth 3
mrcbC52 4 A 4a 4a 4a 20231122135432.7
inst_support RVO:67985556
permalink http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0216152
arlyear 2012
mrcbTft \nSoubory v repozitáři: Guy-0386716-3.pdf, Guy-0386716-2.pdf, Guy-0386716-1.pdf
mrcbU10 2012
mrcbU10 Berlin Springer-Verlag
mrcbU12 978-3-642-24646-3
mrcbU14 84885609056 SCOPUS