Best-response Mechanisms, introduced by Nisan et al. (2011) provide a unifying framework for studying various distributed protocols in which the participants are instructed to repeatedly best respond to each others’ strategies. Two fundamental features of these mechanisms are convergence and incentive compatibility. This work investigates convergence and incentive compatibility conditions of such mechanisms when players are not guaranteed to always best respond but they rather play an imperfect best-response strategy. That is, at every time step every player deviates from the prescribed best-response strategy according to some probability parameter. The results explain to what extent convergence and incentive compatibility depend on the ass...
International audienceIn this paper we design and analyze distributed best response dynamics to comp...
In this work we completely characterize how the frequency with which each player participates in the...
We consider a non-cooperative multilateral bargaining game and study an action-dependent bargaining ...
Best-response Mechanisms, introduced by Nisan et al. (2011) provide a unifying framework for studyin...
Best-response mechanisms (Nisan, Schapira, Valiant, Zohar, 2011) provide a unifying framework for st...
International audienceIn this paper, we characterize the revision sets in different variants of the ...
In many computational and economic models of multi-agent interaction, each participant repeatedly “b...
We analyze the performance of the best-response dynamic across all normal-form games using a random ...
Game theory is widely used as a behavioral model for strategic interactions in biology and social sc...
This paper studies a class of strongly monotone games involving non-cooperative agents that optimize...
In this paper, we study contention resolution protocols from a game-theoretic perspective. We focus ...
We address the problem of mechanism design for two-stage repeated stochastic games -- a novel settin...
To study how sustainable cooperation might emerge among self-interested interacting individuals, we ...
International audienceIn this paper we design and analyze distributed best response dynamics to comp...
In this work we completely characterize how the frequency with which each player participates in the...
We consider a non-cooperative multilateral bargaining game and study an action-dependent bargaining ...
Best-response Mechanisms, introduced by Nisan et al. (2011) provide a unifying framework for studyin...
Best-response mechanisms (Nisan, Schapira, Valiant, Zohar, 2011) provide a unifying framework for st...
International audienceIn this paper, we characterize the revision sets in different variants of the ...
In many computational and economic models of multi-agent interaction, each participant repeatedly “b...
We analyze the performance of the best-response dynamic across all normal-form games using a random ...
Game theory is widely used as a behavioral model for strategic interactions in biology and social sc...
This paper studies a class of strongly monotone games involving non-cooperative agents that optimize...
In this paper, we study contention resolution protocols from a game-theoretic perspective. We focus ...
We address the problem of mechanism design for two-stage repeated stochastic games -- a novel settin...
To study how sustainable cooperation might emerge among self-interested interacting individuals, we ...
International audienceIn this paper we design and analyze distributed best response dynamics to comp...
In this work we completely characterize how the frequency with which each player participates in the...
We consider a non-cooperative multilateral bargaining game and study an action-dependent bargaining ...