In non-truthful auctions, agents' utility for a strategy depends on the strategies of the opponents and also the prior distribution over their private types; the set of Bayes Nash equilibria generally has an intricate dependence on the prior. Using the First Price Auction as our main demonstrating example, we show that $\tilde O(n / \epsilon^2)$ samples from the prior with $n$ agents suffice for an algorithm to learn the interim utilities for all monotone bidding strategies. As a consequence, this number of samples suffice for learning all approximate equilibria. We give almost matching (up to polylog factors) lower bound on the sample complexity for learning utilities. We also consider a setting where agents must pay a search cost to disco...
The field of algorithmic mechanism design is concerned with the design of computationally efficient ...
We study the liquid welfare in sequential first-price auctions with budget-limited buyers. We focus ...
We examine a model in which buyers with single-unit demand are faced with an infinite sequence of au...
We consider the problem of computing a (pure) Bayes-Nash equilibrium in the first-price auction with...
Traditionally, the Bayesian optimal auction design problem has been considered either when the bidde...
Auction theory traditionally assumes that bidders’ val- uation distributions are known to the auctio...
Auctions define games of incomplete information for which it is often too hard to compute the exact...
Auctions are modeled as Bayesian games with continuous type and action spaces. Computing equilibria ...
Auction theory traditionally assumes that bidders’ val- uation distributions are known to the auctio...
Traditionally, the Bayesian optimal auction design problem has been considered either when the bidde...
Our paper concerns the computation of Nash equilibria of first-price auctions with correlated values...
AbstractWe extend the well-known fictitious play (FP) algorithm to compute pure-strategy Bayesian-Na...
We highlight recent progress in worst-case analysis of welfare in first price auctions. It was shown...
We provide a revealed preference characterization of equilibrium behavior in first price sealed bid ...
This paper presents new results on the existence of pure-strategy Bayesian equilibria in specified fu...
The field of algorithmic mechanism design is concerned with the design of computationally efficient ...
We study the liquid welfare in sequential first-price auctions with budget-limited buyers. We focus ...
We examine a model in which buyers with single-unit demand are faced with an infinite sequence of au...
We consider the problem of computing a (pure) Bayes-Nash equilibrium in the first-price auction with...
Traditionally, the Bayesian optimal auction design problem has been considered either when the bidde...
Auction theory traditionally assumes that bidders’ val- uation distributions are known to the auctio...
Auctions define games of incomplete information for which it is often too hard to compute the exact...
Auctions are modeled as Bayesian games with continuous type and action spaces. Computing equilibria ...
Auction theory traditionally assumes that bidders’ val- uation distributions are known to the auctio...
Traditionally, the Bayesian optimal auction design problem has been considered either when the bidde...
Our paper concerns the computation of Nash equilibria of first-price auctions with correlated values...
AbstractWe extend the well-known fictitious play (FP) algorithm to compute pure-strategy Bayesian-Na...
We highlight recent progress in worst-case analysis of welfare in first price auctions. It was shown...
We provide a revealed preference characterization of equilibrium behavior in first price sealed bid ...
This paper presents new results on the existence of pure-strategy Bayesian equilibria in specified fu...
The field of algorithmic mechanism design is concerned with the design of computationally efficient ...
We study the liquid welfare in sequential first-price auctions with budget-limited buyers. We focus ...
We examine a model in which buyers with single-unit demand are faced with an infinite sequence of au...