mechanism$47448$ - significado y definición. Qué es mechanism$47448$
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Qué (quién) es mechanism$47448$ - definición

Revelation mechanism; Direct mechanism; Direct-revelation mechanism

Mechanism (sociology)         
CONCEPT IN SOCIOLOGY; THE TERM SOCIAL MECHANISMS AND MECHANISM-BASED EXPLANATIONS OF SOCIAL PHENOMENON ORIGINATE FROM THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Mechanism of social control; Mechanism (economics); Social mechanism
The term social mechanisms and mechanism-based explanations of social phenomena originate from the philosophy of science.
Mechanism (biology)         
SYSTEM OF CAUSALLY INTERACTING PARTS AND PROCESSES THAT PRODUCE ONE OR MORE EFFECTS
Biological mechanism
In the science of biology, a mechanism is a system of causally interacting parts and processes that produce one or more effects. Scientists explain phenomena by describing mechanisms that could produce the phenomena.
Kappa–mechanism         
CAUSE OF CHANGES IN LUMINOSITY OF MANY TYPES OF PULSATING VARIABLE STARS
Κ-mechanism; Κ mechanism; Kappa mechanism; Kappa-mechanism; Eddington valve
The kappa opacity mechanism is the driving mechanism behind the changes in luminosity of many types of pulsating variable stars. The term Eddington valve has been used for this mechanism, but this is increasingly obsolete.

Wikipedia

Revelation principle

The revelation principle is a fundamental principle in mechanism design. It states that if a social choice function can be implemented by an arbitrary mechanism (i.e. if that mechanism has an equilibrium outcome that corresponds to the outcome of the social choice function), then the same function can be implemented by an incentive-compatible-direct-mechanism (i.e. in which players truthfully report type) with the same equilibrium outcome (payoffs).: 224–225 

In mechanism design, the revelation principle is of utmost importance in finding solutions. The researcher need only look at the set of equilibria characterized by incentive compatibility. That is, if the mechanism designer wants to implement some outcome or property, they can restrict their search to mechanisms in which agents are willing to reveal their private information to the mechanism designer that has that outcome or property. If no such direct and truthful mechanism exists, no mechanism can implement this outcome/property by contraposition. By narrowing the area needed to be searched, the problem of finding a mechanism becomes much easier.

The principle comes in two variants corresponding to the two flavors of incentive-compatibility:

  • The dominant-strategy revelation-principle says that every social-choice function that can be implemented in dominant-strategies can be implemented by a dominant-strategy-incentive-compatible (DSIC) mechanism (introduced by Allan Gibbard).
  • The Bayesian-Nash revelation-principle says that every social-choice function that can be implemented in Bayesian-Nash equilibrium (Bayesian game, i.e. game of incomplete information) can be implemented by a Bayesian-Nash incentive-compatibility (BNIC) mechanism. This broader solution concept was introduced by Dasgupta, Hammond and Maskin, Holmstrom, and Myerson.