The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2005 goes to Robert J. Aumann and Thomas C. Schelling "for having enhanced our understanding of conflict and cooperation through game-theory analysis.
Thomas C. Schelling
Distinguished University Professor
301-405-3494
[email protected]Expertise
Foreign affairs, national security, nuclear strategy and arms controlDr. Schelling came to the Maryland School of Public Affairs after twenty years at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, where he was the Lucius N. Littauer Professor of Political Economy. He has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Medicine, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1991 he was President of the American Economic Association, of which he is a Distinguished Fellow. He was the recipient of the Frank E. Seidman Distinguished Award in Political Economy and the National Academy of Sciences award for Behavioral Research Relevant to the Prevention of Nuclear War. He served in the Economic Cooperation Administration in Europe, and has held positions in the White House and Executive Office of the President, Yale University, the RAND Corporation and the Department of Economics and Center for International Affairs at Harvard University. He has published on military strategy and arms control, energy and environmental policy, climate change, nuclear proliferation, terrorism, organized crime, foreign aid and international trade, conflict and bargaining theory, racial segregation and integration, the military draft, health policy, tobacco and drugs policy, and ethical issues in public policy and in business.
CURRICULUM VITAE
Robert J. AumannMarch 2003
Personal
Date of Birth: June 8, 1930.
Personal Status: Widower, 5 children, 17 grandchildren, 1 great-grandchild.Education
1950: B.S., Mathematics, City College of New York.
1952: S.M., Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
1955: Ph.D., Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Academic Appointments
Since 1956: Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mathematics Department.
1956: Instructor; 1958: Lecturer; 1961: Senior Lecturer; 1964: Associate Professor; 1968: Professor; 2001: Emeritus.1960-1961: Research Associate, Princeton University, Econometric Research Program.
1964-1965: Visiting Professor, Department of Statistics and Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University.
1969-1993: Outside Teacher (part time), Statistics Department, Tel Aviv University.
1971, 1985-1986: Ford Visiting Research Professor of Economics, University of California at Berkeley.
1972, 1978, 1984: Visiting Professor, Center for Operations Research and Econometrics, Universite Catholique de Louvain.
1975-1976, 1980-1981: Visiting Professor of Economics, Stanford University.
1979-1980: Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies, The Hebrew University.
1984: Member, Institute for Mathematics and its Applications, University of Minnesota.
1985-1986: Member, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, Berkeley.
1986-1989, 1991-2003: Professor (part time), Institute for Decision Sciences and Economics Department, State University of New York, Stony Brook.
1989: Visiting Scholar, Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University.
Since 1991: Member, Center for the Study of Rationality, The Hebrew University.
1997: Oskar Morgenstern Visiting Professor of Economics, New York University.
1999-2000: Nemmers Professor of Economics, Northwestern University.
Academy Affiliations, Prizes, Honorary DoctoratesSince 1974: Foreign Honorary Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Since 1985: Member, National Academy of Sciences (USA).
. Since 1989: Member, Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.Since 1995: Corresponding Fellow, British Academy.
1983: Harvey Prize in Science and Technology (awarded by the Technion -- Israel Institute of Technology).
1994: Israel Prize in Economics.
1995: Lanchester Prize in Operations Research.
1998: Erwin Plein Nemmers Prize in Economics (awarded by Northwestern University).
2002: EMET Prize in Economics (awarded by the Prime Minister of Israel).
1988: Honorary Doctorate, University of Bonn.
1989: Honorary Doctorate, Universite Catholique de Louvain.
1992: Honorary Doctorate, University of Chicago.
Society OfficesSince 1966: Fellow, Econometric Society.
1977-1982: Council, Econometric Society.
1982-1985: Executive Committee, Econometric Society.
1990-1992: President, Israel Mathematics Union.
Since 1993: Honorary Member, American Economic Association.
1998-2003: President, Game Theory Society.
Major Invited Addresses at Large International Congresses1970: "A Survey of Economies with a Continuum of Agents," Second World Congress of the Econometric Society, Cambridge.
1972: "values of Markets with a Continuum of Traders," Walras-Bowley Lecture at the Winter meeting of the Econometric Society, Toronto.
1978: "Recent Developments in the Theory of the Shapley value," International Congress of Mathematicians, Helsinki.
1980: "Repeated Games," Fourth World Congress of the Econometric Society, Aix-en-Provence.
1991: "Some Thoughts on the Foundations of Game Theory," Ninth International Congress on Logic, Philosophy, and Methodology of the Sciences, Uppsala.
1995: "Old and New Results on Dynamic Games," Fourteenth European Conference on Operational Research, Jerusalem.
1995: "Cooperation between Game-Playing Machines," IJCAI-95 (Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence), Montreal.
1996: "Some Applications of Game Theory in the Real World," Fourteenth Latin American Congress of the Econometric Society, Rio de Janeiro.
1999: "Empirical Game Theory: Polls, Experiments, and Reality," Keynote Plenary Lecture, Seventeenth Latin American Congress of the Econometric Society, Cancun.
2000: Presidential Address, First World Congress of the Game Theory Society, Bilbao.
Endowed Lectures1986: "Cooperation, Rationality, and Bounded Rationality," Nancy L. Schwartz Memorial Lecture, Northwestern University.
1988: "Analysis of a Passage from the Babylonian Talmud in the Light of Game Theory," Elisha Pazner Memorial Lecture, Tel Aviv University.
1990: "Building Trust," David Kinley Memorial Lecture, University of Illinois.
1992: "Consistency," Alfredo Pareto Lecture, Annual meeting of ASSET (Southern European Economic Association), Toulouse.
1992: "Rationality, Knowledge, and Equilibrium," German Bernacer Memorial Lectures, University of Alicante.
1993: " 'As If ' Reasoning in Economics and Game Theory," Lionel McKenzie Lecture, University of Rochester.
1994: "Strategic Equilibrium and Population Equilibrium," Kenneth Arrow Lectures, Stanford University.
1998: "Game Theory in the Talmud," Chaim Leib Pekeris Memorial Lecture, Weizmann Institute of Science.
2002: "Rule Rationality versus Act Rationality," Political Economy Lecture Series, Harvard University.
2003: "Rule Rationality versus Act Rationality," Elisha Pazner Memorial Lecture, Tel Aviv University.
Organization of Conferences1965: Organized (together with M. Maschler) the First International Workshop in Game Theory, Jerusalem.
1975: Organized First Belgian-Israeli Conference in Mathematical Economics and Game Theory, Jerusalem.
1979-1980: Organized Emphasis Year in Game Theory and Mathematical Economics, Institute for Advanced Studies, Jerusalem.
ConsultingE.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, Wilmington
Mathematica, Inc., Princeton
U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Washington
The Rand Corporation, Santa Monica
Everyman's University, Tel Aviv
Supervision of Doctoral ThesesB. Peleg (Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, The Hebrew University)
D. Schmeidler (Professor of Economics and Statistics, Tel Aviv U.)
S. Zamir (Professor Emeritus of Statistics, The Hebrew University)
B. Shitovitz (Professor of Economics, University of Haifa)
Z. Artstein (Professor of Mathematics, The Weizmann Institute)
E. Kohlberg (Professor, Harvard Business School)
S. Hart (Professor of Mathematics and Economics, The Hebrew U.)
E. Wesley (U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (?))
A. Neyman (Professor of Mathematics, The Hebrew University)
Y. Tauman (Professor, Tel Aviv University School of Business)
D. Samet (Professor, Tel Aviv University School of Business)
E. Lehrer (Professor of Statistics, Tel Aviv University)
Y. Feinberg (Associate Professor, Stanford Business School)
EditorialSince 1971: Member Editorial Board, International Journal of Game Theory.
Since 1974: Member Advisory Board, Journal of Mathematical Economics.
1974-1979: Associate Editor, Journal of Economic Theory.
1975-1978: Associate Editor, Econometrica.
1975-1979: Area Editor for Game Theory, Mathematics of Operations Research.
Since 1979: Member Advisory Board, Mathematics of Operations Research.
1976-1980: Member Editorial Board, SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics.
Since 1989: Member Editorial Board, Games and Economic Behavior.
Since 2000: Associate Editor, Journal of the European Mathematical Society.
Summer Positions1956: Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey.
1957-1958: U.S. National Bureau of Standards, Washington, D.C.
1962: Princeton University, Econometric Research Program.
1963, 1968: The Rand Corporation, Santa Monica, California.
1964: The University of California at Berkeley, Economics Department.
1971-1993, 1998-2000: Stanford University, Economics Department.
Administrative1966-1968: Chairman of the Institute of Mathematics at the Hebrew University.