Symmetric Subgame Perfect Equilibria in Resource Allocation

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Abstract

We analyze symmetric protocols to rationally coordinate on an asymmetric, efficient allocation in an infinitely repeated N-agent, C-resource allocation problems. (Bhaskar 2000) proposed one way to achieve this in 2-agent, 1-resource allocation games: Agents start by symmetrically randomizing their actions, and as soon as they each choose different actions, they start to follow a potentially asymmetric “convention” that prescribes their actions from then on. We extend the concept of convention to the general case of infinitely repeated resource allocation games with N agents and C resources. We show that for any convention, there exists a symmetric subgame perfect equilibrium which implements it. We present two conventions: bourgeois, where agents stick to the first allocation; and market, where agents pay for the use of resources, and observe a global coordination signal which allows them to alternate between different allocations. We define price of anonymity of a convention as the ratio between the maximum social payoff of any (asymmetric) strategy profile and the expected social payoff of the convention. We show that while the price of anonymity of the bourgeois convention is infinite, the market convention decreases this price by reducing the conflict between the agents.

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APA

Cigler, L., & Faltings, B. (2012). Symmetric Subgame Perfect Equilibria in Resource Allocation. In Proceedings of the 26th AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, AAAI 2012 (pp. 1326–1332). AAAI Press. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v26i1.8233

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