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Published May 2008 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Regret minimization and the price of total anarchy

Abstract

We propose weakening the assumption made when studying the price of anarchy: Rather than assume that self-interested players will play according to a Nash equilibrium (which may even be computationally hard to find), we assume only that selfish players play so as to minimize their own regret. Regret minimization can be done via simple, efficient algorithms even in many settings where the number of action choices for each player is exponential in the natural parameters of the problem. We prove that despite our weakened assumptions, in several broad classes of games, this "price of total anarchy" matches the Nash price of anarchy, even though play may never converge to Nash equilibrium. In contrast to the price of anarchy and the recently introduced price of sinking, which require all players to behave in a prescribed manner, we show that the price of total anarchy is in many cases resilient to the presence of Byzantine players, about whom we make no assumptions. Finally, because the price of total anarchy is an upper bound on the price of anarchy even in mixed strategies, for some games our results yield as corollaries previously unknown bounds on the price of anarchy in mixed strategies.

Additional Information

© 2008 ACM. Supported in part by the National Science Foundation under grant CCF-0514922. Work completed while the author was a postdoctoral fellow at Carnegie Mellon. Supported in part by an AT&T Labs Graduate Research Fellowship and an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship. We thank Evangelia Pyrga for bringing [6] to our attention.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023