Title :
Nash equilibria in competitive societies, with applications to facility location, traffic routing and auctions
Author_Institution :
McGill Univ., Montreal, Que., Canada
Abstract :
We consider the following class of problems. The value of an outcome to a society is measured via a submodular utility function (submodularity has a natural economic interpretation: decreasing marginal utility). Decisions, however, are controlled by non-cooperative agents who seek to maximise their own private utility. We present, under basic assumptions, guarantees on the social performance of Nash equilibria. For submodular utility functions, any Nash equilibrium gives an expected social utility within a factor 2 of optimal, subject to a function-dependent additive term. For non-decreasing, submodular utility functions, any Nash equilibrium gives an expected social utility within a factor 1+δ of optimal, where 0≤δ≤1 is a number based upon discrete curvature of the function. A condition under which all sets of social and private utility functions induce pure strategy Nash equilibria is presented. The case in which agents themselves make use of approximation algorithms in decision making is discussed and performance guarantees given. Finally we present specific problems that fall into our framework. These include competitive versions of the facility location problem and k-median problem, a maximisation version of the traffic routing problem studied by Roughgarden and Tardos (2000), and multiple-item auctions.
Keywords :
competitive algorithms; computational complexity; decision making; facility location; game theory; network routing; Nash equilibria; approximation algorithms; competitive societies; decision making; decreasing marginal utility; discrete curvature function; expected social utility; facility location; function-dependent additive term; k-median problem; maximisation; multiple-item auctions; noncooperative agents; outcome value; performance guarantees; private utility functions; social performance guarantees; social utility functions; submodular utility function; traffic routing; Approximation algorithms; Costs; Decision making; Game theory; Gold; Internet; Measurement standards; Nash equilibrium; Routing; Societies;
Conference_Titel :
Foundations of Computer Science, 2002. Proceedings. The 43rd Annual IEEE Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1822-2
DOI :
10.1109/SFCS.2002.1181966