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Showing 1 to 15 of 127 results Save | Export
Mariel Anne Farrar Werner – ProQuest LLC, 2024
When multiple clients are collaboratively learning and training a shared model, incentives problems can arise. The clients may have different learning objectives and application domains, or they may be competitors whose participation in the learning system could reduce their competitive advantage. While collaborative learning is a powerful…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Alignment (Education), Educational Objectives, Incentives
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Zhang, Qiannan; Lin, Sheng; Liu, Jinlan; Jin, Yuchen – Cogent Education, 2022
Understanding how students decide whether to participate during collaborative learning activities and what factors are their main concerns is important for efficient use of such activities in or out of the classroom. Based on evolutionary game theory, this study proposed a game model for collaborative learning that aimed to analyze the dynamic…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Game Theory, Student Motivation, Student Behavior
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Bouchard St-Amant, Pier-André; Brabant, Alexis-Nicolas; Germain, Éric – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 2020
This paper analyzes the incentives induced by a formula to fund universities based primarily on enrolment. Using a simple game theoretical framework, we argue that the strategic behaviour induced by those formulas is to favour enrollment. We further argue that if the funding value differs by enrolment type, it introduces incentives to substitute…
Descriptors: Funding Formulas, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
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Klein, Gene – Journal of Education for Business, 2018
A close look at the educational literature reveals both negative perceptions among peer assessment participants and evidence that peer assessment may not as effective as generally thought. An analysis of peer assessment using game theory is proposed and examined. This examination helps to explain the aforementioned lack of effectiveness and…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Game Theory, Teaching Methods, Instructional Effectiveness
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Tarasenko, Larissa V.; Ougolnitsky, Guennady A.; Usov, Anatoly B.; Vaskov, Maksim A.; Kirik, Vladimir A.; Astoyanz, Margarita S.; Angel, Olga Y. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2016
A dynamic game theoretic model of concordance of interests in the process of social partnership in the system of continuing professional education is proposed. Non-cooperative, cooperative, and hierarchical setups are examined. Analytical solution for a linear state version of the model is provided. Nash equilibrium algorithms (for non-cooperative…
Descriptors: Professional Continuing Education, Game Theory, Models, Partnerships in Education
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Jungck, John R. – PRIMUS, 2022
Finite Mathematics has become an enormously rich and productive area of contemporary mathematical biology. Fortunately, educators have developed educational modules based upon many of the models that have used Finite Mathematics in mathematical biology research. A sufficient variety of computer modules that employ graph theory (phylogenetic trees,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mathematical Models, Learning Modules
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Mayer, Igor; Warmelink, Harald; Zhou, Qiqi – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2016
The authors explore how framing theory and the method of frame-reflective discourse analysis provide foundations for the emerging discipline of serious games (SGs) research. Starting with Wittgenstein's language game and Berger and Luckmann's social constructivist view on science, the authors demonstrate why a definitional or taxonomic approach to…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Educational Games, Game Theory, Educational Research
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Macy, Michael; Tsvetkova, Milena – Sociological Methods & Research, 2015
Noise is widely regarded as a residual category--the unexplained variance in a linear model or the random disturbance of a predictable pattern. Accordingly, formal models often impose the simplifying assumption that the world is noise-free and social dynamics are deterministic. Where noise is assigned causal importance, it is often assumed to be a…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Models, Social Science Research, Sociology
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Winter, Fabian; Rauhut, Heiko; Helbing, Dirk – Social Forces, 2012
Why does the adherence to norms not prevent conflict? While the current literature focuses on the emergence, maintenance and impact of norms with regard to cooperation, the issue of norm-related conflict deserves more attention. We develop a general game theoretical model of "normative conflict" and explain how transaction failures on the…
Descriptors: Conflict, Norms, Cooperation, Game Theory
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Westhoff, Wayne W.; Cohen, Cynthia F.; Cooper, Elizabeth Elliott; Corvin, Jaime; McDermott, Robert J. – American Journal of Health Education, 2012
In this paper, we use game theory to understand decisions to cooperate or to compete in the delivery of public health services. Health care is a quasi-public good that is often associated with altruistic behavior, yet it operates in an increasingly competitive environment. With mounting health care regulation and changes in privatization,…
Descriptors: Health Education, Game Theory, Decision Making, Behavior
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Ashton, Weslynne; Wagman, Liad – Education Economics, 2015
We study the dynamics in an educational partnership between a university and a developing region. We examine how the university achieves its goals to improve and advertise its offerings while recruiting a cohort of students from the developing region and maintaining a sustainable relationship with the region and its students. We show that mutually…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, International Cooperation, Universities, Student Recruitment
Snow, Erica L. – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2015
Intelligent tutoring systems are adaptive learning environments designed to support individualized instruction. The adaptation embedded within these systems is often guided by user models that represent one or more aspects of students' domain knowledge, actions, or performance. The proposed project focuses on the development and testing of user…
Descriptors: Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Models, Individualized Instruction, Needs Assessment
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Williams, Miriam F. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2012
The author uses game theoretical models to identify technical communication breakdowns encountered during the notoriously confusing Texas Two-Step voting and caucusing process. Specifically, the author uses narrative theory and game theory to highlight areas where caucus participants needed instructions to better understand the rules of the game…
Descriptors: Game Theory, Models, Identification, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Faria, Joao Ricardo; Mixon, Franklin G., Jr.; Salter, Sean P. – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Workplace bullying or mobbing can be defined as the infliction of various forms of abuse (e.g., verbal, emotional, psychological) against a colleague or subordinate by one or more other members of a workplace. Even in the presence of academic tenure, workplace mobbing remains a prevalent issue in academe. This study develops an economic model that…
Descriptors: Bullying, Interprofessional Relationship, College Faculty, Administrators
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Kameda, Tatsuya; Tsukasaki, Takafumi; Hastie, Reid; Berg, Nathan – Psychological Review, 2011
We introduce a game theory model of individual decisions to cooperate by contributing personal resources to group decisions versus by free riding on the contributions of other members. In contrast to most public-goods games that assume group returns are linear in individual contributions, the present model assumes decreasing marginal group…
Descriptors: Productivity, Game Theory, Democracy, Decision Making
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