Polymatrix Competitive Gradient Descent
Abstract
Many economic games and machine learning approaches can be cast as competitive optimization problems where multiple agents are minimizing their respective objective function, which depends on all agents' actions. While gradient descent is a reliable basic workhorse for single-agent optimization, it often leads to oscillation in competitive optimization. In this work we propose polymatrix competitive gradient descent (PCGD) as a method for solving general sum competitive optimization involving arbitrary numbers of agents. The updates of our method are obtained as the Nash equilibria of a local polymatrix approximation with a quadratic regularization, and can be computed efficiently by solving a linear system of equations. We prove local convergence of PCGD to stable fixed points for n-player general-sum games, and show that it does not require adapting the step size to the strength of the player-interactions. We use PCGD to optimize policies in multi-agent reinforcement learning and demonstrate its advantages in Snake, Markov soccer and an electricity market game. Agents trained by PCGD outperform agents trained with simultaneous gradient descent, symplectic gradient adjustment, and extragradient in Snake and Markov soccer games and on the electricity market game, PCGD trains faster than both simultaneous gradient descent and the extragradient method.
Additional Information
AA is supported in part by the Bren endowed chair, Microsoft, Google, and Adobe faculty fellowships. FS gratefully acknowledge support by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award number FA9550-18-1-0271 (Games for Computation and Learning) and the Ronald and Maxine Linde Institute of Economic and Management Sciences at Caltech.Attached Files
Submitted - 2111.08565.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 115603
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20220714-224639640
- Bren Professor of Computing and Mathematical Sciences
- Microsoft Faculty Fellowship
- Google Faculty Research Award
- Adobe
- Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR)
- FA9550-18-1-0271
- Linde Institute of Economic and Management Science
- Created
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2022-07-15Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2023-06-02Created from EPrint's last_modified field