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Self-confirming equilibrium

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Self-confirming equilibrium

In game-theory, self-confirming equilibrium is a generalization of nash-equilibrium for extensive-form-games, in which players correctly predict the moves their opponents make, but may have misconceptions about what their opponents would do at information sets that are never reached when the equilibrium is played. Self-confirming equilibrium is motivated by the idea that if a game is played repeatedly, the players will revise their beliefs about their opponents' play if and only if they observe these beliefs to be wrong.

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