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| author | Paul <Paul@Pauls-MacBook-Air.local> | 2014-12-16 16:40:55 -0500 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Paul <Paul@Pauls-MacBook-Air.local> | 2014-12-16 16:40:55 -0500 |
| commit | fe3550c7f37f725ad241c5c83e6796a6b8c37c08 (patch) | |
| tree | b36215759dc28fca4b06c2c893f09ec3e34e85a3 | |
| parent | 63e4895745fc0f633074520412d0ba7820cb844d (diff) | |
| download | econ2099-fe3550c7f37f725ad241c5c83e6796a6b8c37c08.tar.gz | |
Corrected small typo
| -rw-r--r-- | project2/main.tex | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/project2/main.tex b/project2/main.tex index c83e783..fb34a40 100644 --- a/project2/main.tex +++ b/project2/main.tex @@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ answer to our problem: In the general case, a candidate simple mechanism suggested by Jason Hartline is the following: the buyer is charged a price $p_0$ to participate in the -mechanism, and then is offered each item separately with a posted prices +mechanism, and then is offered each item separately with posted prices $p_1,\ldots, p_m$. This is essentially the concept of a two-part tariff, as discussed in \cite{armstrong}. Our problem is then to understand how to set $p_0$ and the posted prices $p_1,\ldots, p_m$ such that in expectation over the |
