Improved Price of Anarchy via Predictions
A central goal in algorithmic game theory is to analyze the performance of decentralized multiagent systems, like communication and information networks. In the absence of a central planner who can enforce how these systems are utilized, the users can strategically interact with the system, aiming t...
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Zusammenfassung: | A central goal in algorithmic game theory is to analyze the performance of
decentralized multiagent systems, like communication and information networks.
In the absence of a central planner who can enforce how these systems are
utilized, the users can strategically interact with the system, aiming to
maximize their own utility, possibly leading to very inefficient outcomes, and
thus a high price of anarchy. To alleviate this issue, the system designer can
use decentralized mechanisms that regulate the use of each resource (e.g.,
using local queuing protocols or scheduling mechanisms), but with only limited
information regarding the state of the system. These information limitations
have a severe impact on what such decentralized mechanisms can achieve, so most
of the success stories in this literature have had to make restrictive
assumptions (e.g., by either restricting the structure of the networks or the
types of cost functions).
In this paper, we overcome some of the obstacles that the literature has
imposed on decentralized mechanisms, by designing mechanisms that are enhanced
with predictions regarding the missing information. Specifically, inspired by
the big success of the literature on "algorithms with predictions", we design
decentralized mechanisms with predictions and evaluate their price of anarchy
as a function of the prediction error, focusing on two very well-studied
classes of games: scheduling games and multicast network formation games. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2205.04252 |