Altruism in Atomic Congestion Games
Martin Hoefer, Alexander Skopalik

TL;DR
This paper explores how introducing altruistic agents into atomic congestion games affects equilibrium existence, stability, and convergence, providing algorithms and complexity results for various game types and incentive mechanisms.
Contribution
It models altruism as a trade-off in congestion games, analyzes equilibrium properties, and develops algorithms and hardness results for incentivizing altruistic behavior.
Findings
Nash equilibria exist for symmetric singleton games with convex delays
Polynomial-time algorithm to decide equilibrium existence for symmetric singleton games with arbitrary delays
NP-hardness of equilibrium existence in general congestion games with linear delays
Abstract
This paper studies the effects of introducing altruistic agents into atomic congestion games. Altruistic behavior is modeled by a trade-off between selfish and social objectives. In particular, we assume agents optimize a linear combination of personal delay of a strategy and the resulting increase in social cost. Our model can be embedded in the framework of congestion games with player-specific latency functions. Stable states are the Nash equilibria of these games, and we examine their existence and the convergence of sequential best-response dynamics. Previous work shows that for symmetric singleton games with convex delays Nash equilibria are guaranteed to exist. For concave delay functions we observe that there are games without Nash equilibria and provide a polynomial time algorithm to decide existence for symmetric singleton games with arbitrary delay functions. Our algorithm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGame Theory and Applications · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies · Economic theories and models
