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  • Search: subject:"opponent processing"
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Year of publication
Subject
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attention control 2 event-related potentials 2 opponent processing 2 reward processing 2 rock-paper-scissors 2 abstract logic 1 formal ontology 1 imaginary logic 1 invariance criterion 1 meaning postulates 1 opponent-processing model 1 over-defined games 1 payoff independence 1 ‘stabilized-image’ experiments 1
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Online availability
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Free 3 CC license 1
Type of publication
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Article 2 Book / Working Paper 1
Type of publication (narrower categories)
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Article 1 Article in journal 1 Aufsatz in Zeitschrift 1
Language
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English 2 Undetermined 1
Author
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Gagliardi, Greg A. 2 Hassall, Cameron D. 2 Krigolson, Olave E. 2 Redden, Ralph S. 2 Williams, Chad C. 2 Dragalina–Chernaya, Elena 1
Institution
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National Research University Higher School of Economics 1
Published in...
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Games 2 HSE Working papers 1
Source
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ECONIS (ZBW) 1 EconStor 1 RePEc 1
Showing 1 - 3 of 3
Cover Image
Champ versus Chump: Viewing an opponent's face engages attention but not reward systems
Redden, Ralph S.; Gagliardi, Greg A.; Williams, Chad C.; … - In: Games 12 (2021) 3, pp. 1-12
When we play competitive games, the opponents that we face act as predictors of the outcome of the game. For instance, if you are an average chess player and you face a Grandmaster, you anticipate a loss. Framed in a reinforcement learning perspective, our opponents can be thought of as...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013200124
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Cover Image
Champ versus Chump : viewing an opponent's face engages attention but not reward systems
Redden, Ralph S.; Gagliardi, Greg A.; Williams, Chad C.; … - In: Games 12 (2021) 3, pp. 1-12
When we play competitive games, the opponents that we face act as predictors of the outcome of the game. For instance, if you are an average chess player and you face a Grandmaster, you anticipate a loss. Framed in a reinforcement learning perspective, our opponents can be thought of as...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012607440
Saved in:
Cover Image
The logic of forbidden colours
Dragalina–Chernaya, Elena - National Research University Higher School of Economics - 2012
The purpose of this paper is twofold: (1) to clarify Ludwig Wittgenstein’s thesis that colours possess logical structures, focusing on his ‘puzzle proposition’ that “there can be a bluish green but not a reddish green”, (2) to compare model-theoretical and game-theoretical approaches...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010720522
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