I expect army1987′s talking about Chicken), the game of machismo in which participants rush headlong at each other in cars or other fast-moving dangerous objects and whoever swerves first loses. The payoff matrix doesn’t resemble the Prisoner’s Dilemma all that much: there’s more than one Nash equilibrium, and by far the worst outcome from either player’s perspective occurs when both players play the move analogous to defection (i.e. don’t swerve). It’s probably most interesting as a vehicle for examining precommitment tactics.
The game-theoretic version of Chicken has often been applied to MAD, as the Wikipedia page mentions.
I expect army1987′s talking about Chicken), the game of machismo in which participants rush headlong at each other in cars or other fast-moving dangerous objects and whoever swerves first loses. The payoff matrix doesn’t resemble the Prisoner’s Dilemma all that much: there’s more than one Nash equilibrium, and by far the worst outcome from either player’s perspective occurs when both players play the move analogous to defection (i.e. don’t swerve). It’s probably most interesting as a vehicle for examining precommitment tactics.
The game-theoretic version of Chicken has often been applied to MAD, as the Wikipedia page mentions.
I was. I should have linked to it, and I have now.