GTAIDMDec 14, 2021

Multi-Leader Congestion Games with an Adversary

arXiv:2112.07435v14 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses equilibrium computation in adversarial game theory, an incremental advance in algorithmic game theory.

The paper tackles the problem of guaranteeing equilibrium existence in multi-leader congestion games with an adversary, showing that a K-approximate equilibrium always exists with K ≈ 1.1974, and provides a polynomial-time algorithm to compute it, with this factor being tight.

We study a multi-leader single-follower congestion game where multiple users (leaders) choose one resource out of a set of resources and, after observing the realized loads, an adversary (single-follower) attacks the resources with maximum loads, causing additional costs for the leaders. For the resulting strategic game among the leaders, we show that pure Nash equilibria may fail to exist and therefore, we consider approximate equilibria instead. As our first main result, we show that the existence of a $K$-approximate equilibrium can always be guaranteed, where $K \approx 1.1974$ is the unique solution of a cubic polynomial equation. To this end, we give a polynomial time combinatorial algorithm which computes a $K$-approximate equilibrium. The factor $K$ is tight, meaning that there is an instance that does not admit an $α$-approximate equilibrium for any $α<K$. Thus $α=K$ is the smallest possible value of $α$ such that the existence of an $α$-approximate equilibrium can be guaranteed for any instance of the considered game. Secondly, we focus on approximate equilibria of a given fixed instance. We show how to compute efficiently a best approximate equilibrium, that is, with smallest possible $α$ among all $α$-approximate equilibria of the given instance.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes