A strategy profile of a normal form game is proper if and only if it is quasi-perfect in every extensive form (with that normal form). Thus, properness requires optimality along a sequence of supporting trembles, while sequentiality only requires optimality in the limit. A decision-theoretic implementation of sequential rationality, strategic independence respecting equilibrium (SIRE), is defined and compared to proper equilibrium, using lexicographic probability systems. Finally, we give tremble-based characterizations, which do not involve structural features of the game, of the rankings of strategies that underlie proper equilibrium and SIRE. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers: C70, C72. © 1997 Academic Press.
CITATION STYLE
Mailath, G. J., Samuelson, L., & Swinkels, J. M. (1997). How proper is sequential equilibrium? Games and Economic Behavior, 18(2), 193–218. https://doi.org/10.1006/game.1997.0518
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