David Schmeidler


David Schmeidler is an Israeli mathematician and economic theorist. He is a Professor Emeritus at Tel Aviv University and the Ohio State University.

Biography

David Schmeidler was born in 1939 in Krakow, Poland. He spent the war years in Russia and moved back to Poland at the end of the war and to Israel in 1949. From 1960 to 1969 he studied mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the advanced degrees under the supervision of Robert Aumann. He visited the Catholic University of Louvain and University of California at Berkeley before joining Tel-Aviv University in 1971, holding professorships in statistics, economics, and management. He held a part-time position as professor of economics at the Ohio State University since 1987.

Main contributions

Schmeidler’s early contributions were in game theory and general equilibrium theory. He suggested a new approach to solving cooperative games – the – based on equity as well as feasibility considerations. This concept, originating from Schmeidler’s PhD dissertation, was used to resolve a 2000-old problem. Robert Aumann and Michael Maschler, in a paper published in 1985, showed that a conundrum from the Babylonian Talmud, which defied scholars’ attempts at comprehension over two millennia, was naturally resolved when applying the concept of the nucleolus.
Schmeidler also pioneered the study of , in which each player has negligible impact on the play of the game, as well as the related concept of “congestion games”, where a player’s payoff only depends on the distribution of the other players’ strategic choices.
Schmeidler has made many other contributions, ranging from conceptual issues in implementation theory, to mathematical results in measure theory. But his most influential contribution is probably in decision theory. Schmeidler was the first to propose a general-purpose, axiomatically-based decision theoretic model that deviated from the Bayesian dictum, according to which any uncertainty can and should be quantified by probabilities. He suggested and axiomatized Choquet Expected Utility, according to which uncertainty is modeled by a capacity and expectation is computed by the Choquet integral.
While this approach can be used to explain commonly observed behavior in Ellsberg’s experiments, Schmeidler’s motivation was not to explain psychological findings. Rather, along the lines attributed to Frank Knight and John Maynard Keynes, the argument is normative, suggesting that it is not necessarily more rational to be Bayesian than not. While in the experiments, drawing balls from urns, one may adopt a probabilistic belief, in real life one often couldn’t find a natural candidate for one’s beliefs.
With his student, Itzhak Gilboa, David Schmeidler also developed the theory maxmin expected utility and case-based decision theory. He has also served as the advisor of , , and .

Selected works

David Schmeidler is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, Honorary Foreign Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a Member of the Israeli Academy of Sciences and Humanities. He served as the President of the Game Theory Society.