Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telecommunication networks, and economics. In most applications, the allocation of resources is determined by a finite number of independent players, each optimizing an individual objective function. An important question in all these applications is the degree of suboptimality caused by selfish resource allocation. We consider the worst-case efficiency of cost sharing methods in resource allocation games in terms of the ratio of the minimum guaranteed surplus of a Nash equilibrium and the maximal surplus. Our main technical result is an upper bound on the efficiency loss that depends on the class of allowable cost functions and the class of allow...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
We consider a resource allocation problem where individual users wish to send data across a network...
We consider network cost-sharing games with non-anonymous cost functions, where the cost of each edg...
A prelimiary version of this paper titled Efficiency and Stability of Nash Equilibria in Resource Al...
This paper studies a resource allocation problem introduced by Koutsoupias and Papadimitriou. The sc...
AbstractThis paper studies a resource allocation problem introduced by Koutsoupias and Papadimitriou...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
Resource allocation problems play a key role in many applications, including traffic networks, telec...
We consider a resource allocation problem where individual users wish to send data across a network...
We consider network cost-sharing games with non-anonymous cost functions, where the cost of each edg...
A prelimiary version of this paper titled Efficiency and Stability of Nash Equilibria in Resource Al...
This paper studies a resource allocation problem introduced by Koutsoupias and Papadimitriou. The sc...
AbstractThis paper studies a resource allocation problem introduced by Koutsoupias and Papadimitriou...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...
Joint use of resources with usage-dependent cost raises the question: who pays how much? We study co...