Rethinking Strategic Mechanism Design In The Age Of Large Language Models: New Directions For Communication Systems
This paper explores the application of large language models (LLMs) in designing strategic mechanisms -- including auctions, contracts, and games -- for specific purposes in communication networks. Traditionally, strategic mechanism design in telecommunications has relied on human expertise to craft...
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper explores the application of large language models (LLMs) in
designing strategic mechanisms -- including auctions, contracts, and games --
for specific purposes in communication networks. Traditionally, strategic
mechanism design in telecommunications has relied on human expertise to craft
solutions based on game theory, auction theory, and contract theory. However,
the evolving landscape of telecom networks, characterized by increasing
abstraction, emerging use cases, and novel value creation opportunities, calls
for more adaptive and efficient approaches. We propose leveraging LLMs to
automate or semi-automate the process of strategic mechanism design, from
intent specification to final formulation. This paradigm shift introduces both
semi-automated and fully-automated design pipelines, raising crucial questions
about faithfulness to intents, incentive compatibility, algorithmic stability,
and the balance between human oversight and artificial intelligence (AI)
autonomy. The paper discusses potential frameworks, such as retrieval-augmented
generation (RAG)-based systems, to implement LLM-driven mechanism design in
communication networks contexts. We examine key challenges, including LLM
limitations in capturing domain-specific constraints, ensuring strategy
proofness, and integrating with evolving telecom standards. By providing an
in-depth analysis of the synergies and tensions between LLMs and strategic
mechanism design within the IoT ecosystem, this work aims to stimulate
discussion on the future of AI-driven information economic mechanisms in
telecommunications and their potential to address complex, dynamic network
management scenarios. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.00495 |