Computing Possible and Necessary Equilibrium Actions (and Bipartisan Set Winners)

Authors

  • Markus Brill Duke University
  • Rupert Freeman Duke University
  • Vincent Conitzer Duke University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.10052

Keywords:

incomplete games, essential set, bipartisan set

Abstract

In many multiagent environments, a designer has some, but limited control over the game being played. In this paper, we formalize this by considering incompletely specified games, in which some entries of the payoff matrices can be chosen from a specified set. We show that it is NP-hard for the designer to make this choices optimally, even in zero-sum games. In fact, it is already intractable to decide whether a given action is (potentially or necessarily) played in equilibrium. We also consider incompletely specified symmetric games in which all completions are required to be symmetric. Here, hardness holds even in weak tournament games (symmetric zero-sum games whose entries are all -1, 0, or 1) and in tournament games (symmetric zero-sum games whose non-diagonal entries are all -1 or 1). The latter result settles the complexity of the possible and necessary winner problems for a social-choice-theoretic solution concept known as the bipartisan set. We finally give a mixed-integer linear programming formulation for weak tournament games and evaluate it experimentally.

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Published

2016-01-05

How to Cite

Brill, M., Freeman, R., & Conitzer, V. (2016). Computing Possible and Necessary Equilibrium Actions (and Bipartisan Set Winners). Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.10052

Issue

Section

Technical Papers: Game Theory and Economic Paradigms