Lessons in Play: An Introduction to Combinatorial Game Theory, Second Edition / Edition 2

Lessons in Play: An Introduction to Combinatorial Game Theory, Second Edition / Edition 2

ISBN-10:
1482243032
ISBN-13:
9781482243031
Pub. Date:
04/22/2019
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
ISBN-10:
1482243032
ISBN-13:
9781482243031
Pub. Date:
04/22/2019
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Lessons in Play: An Introduction to Combinatorial Game Theory, Second Edition / Edition 2

Lessons in Play: An Introduction to Combinatorial Game Theory, Second Edition / Edition 2

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Overview

This second edition of Lessons in Play reorganizes the presentation of the popular original text in combinatorial game theory to make it even more widely accessible. Starting with a focus on the essential concepts and applications, it then moves on to more technical material. Still written in a textbook style with supporting evidence and proofs, the authors add many more exercises and examples and implement a two-step approach for some aspects of the material involving an initial introduction, examples, and basic results to be followed later by more detail and abstract results.

Features

  • Employs a widely accessible style to the explanation of combinatorial game theory
  • Contains multiple case studies
  • Expands further directions and applications of the field
  • Includes a complete rewrite of CGSuite material

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781482243031
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 04/22/2019
Edition description: New
Pages: 346
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Michael Albert - University of Otago

Richard Nowakowski - Dalhousie University

David Wolfe - Dalhousie University

Table of Contents

Combinatorial Games

0.1 Basic Terminology

Problems

1 Basic Techniques

1.1 Greedy

1.2 Symmetry

1.3 Parity

1.4 Give Them Enough Rope!

1.5 Strategy Stealing

1.6 Change the Game!

1.7 Case Study: Long Chains in Dots & Boxes

Problems

2 Outcome Classes

2.1 Outcome Functions

2.2 Game Positions and Options

2.3 Impartial Games: Minding Your Ps and Ns

2.4 Case Study: Roll The Lawn

2.5 Case Study: Timber

2.6 Case Study: Partizan Endnim

Problems

3 Motivational Interlude: Sums of Games

3.1 Sums

3.2 Comparisons

3.3 Equality and Identity

3.4 Case Study: Domineering Rectangles

Problems

4 The Algebra of Games

4.1 The Fundamental Definitions

4.2 Games Form a Group with a Partial Order

4.3 Canonical Form

4.4 Case Study: Cricket Pitch

4.5 Incentives

Problems

5 Values of Games

5.1 Numbers

5.2 Case Study: Shove

5.3 Stops

5.4 A Few All-Smalls: Up, Down, and Stars

5.5 Switches

5.6 Case Study: Elephants & Rhinos

5.7 Tiny and Miny

5.8 Toppling Dominoes

5.9 Proofs of Equivalence of Games and Numbers

Problems

6 Structure

6.1 Games Born by Day 2

6.2 Extremal Games Born By Day n

6.3 More About Numbers

6.4 The Distributive Lattice of Games Born by Day n

6.5 Group Structure

Problems

7 Impartial Games

7.1 A Star-Studded Game

7.2 The Analysis of Nim

7.3 Adding Stars

7.4 A More Succinct Notation

7.5 Taking-and-Breaking Games

7.6 Subtraction Games

7.7 Keypad Games

Problems

8 Hot Games

8.1 Comparing Games and Numbers

8.2 Coping with Confusion

8.3 Cooling Things Down

8.4 Strategies for Playing Hot Games

8.5 Norton Products

Problems

9 All-Small Games

9.1 Cast of Characters

9.2 Motivation: The Scale of Ups

9.3 Equivalence Under

9.4 Atomic Weight

9.5 All-Small Shove

9.6 More Toppling Dominoes

9.7 Clobber

Problems

10 Trimming Game Trees

10.1 Introduction

10.2 Reduced Canonical Form

10.3 Hereditary-Transitive Games

10.4 Ordinal Sum

10.5 Stirling-Shave

10.6 Even More Toppling Dominoes

Problems

Further Directions

1 Transfinite Games

2 Algorithms and Complexity

3 Loopy Games

4 Kos: Repeated Local Positions

5 Top-Down Thermography

6 Enriched Environments

7 Idempotents

8 Mis‘ere Play

9 Scoring Games

A Top-Down Induction

A.1 Top-Down Induction

A.2 Examples

A.3 Why is Top-Down Induction Better?

A.4 Strengthening the Induction Hypothesis

A.5 Inductive Reasoning

Problems

B CGSuite

B.1 Installing CGSuite

B.2 Worksheet Basics

B.3 Programming in CGSuite’s Language

C Solutions to Exercises

D Rulesets

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