Prior-Independent Auctions for Heterogeneous Bidders
We study the design of prior-independent auctions in a setting with heterogeneous bidders. In particular, we consider the setting of selling to $n$ bidders whose values are drawn from $n$ independent but not necessarily identical distributions. We work in the robust auction design regime, where we a...
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Zusammenfassung: | We study the design of prior-independent auctions in a setting with
heterogeneous bidders. In particular, we consider the setting of selling to $n$
bidders whose values are drawn from $n$ independent but not necessarily
identical distributions. We work in the robust auction design regime, where we
assume the seller has no knowledge of the bidders' value distributions and must
design a mechanism that is prior-independent. While there have been many strong
results on prior-independent auction design in the i.i.d. setting, not much is
known for the heterogeneous setting, even though the latter is of significant
practical importance. Unfortunately, no prior-independent mechanism can hope to
always guarantee any approximation to Myerson's revenue in the heterogeneous
setting; similarly, no prior-independent mechanism can consistently do better
than the second-price auction. In light of this, we design a family of
(parametrized) randomized auctions which approximates at least one of these
benchmarks: For heterogeneous bidders with regular value distributions, our
mechanisms either achieve a good approximation of the expected revenue of an
optimal mechanism (which knows the bidders' distributions) or exceeds that of
the second-price auction by a certain multiplicative factor. The factor in the
latter case naturally trades off with the approximation ratio of the former
case. We show that our mechanism is optimal for such a trade-off between the
two cases by establishing a matching lower bound. Our result extends to selling
$k$ identical items to heterogeneous bidders with an additional $O\big(\ln^2
k\big)$-factor in our trade-off between the two cases. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2207.09429 |