Budget Feasible Mechanism Design: From Prior-Free to Bayesian
Xiaohui Bei, Ning Chen, Nick Gravin, Pinyan Lu

TL;DR
This paper develops new budget feasible mechanisms for combinatorial auctions, achieving constant or logarithmic approximations for subadditive valuations in both prior-free and Bayesian settings, advancing the understanding of truthful mechanisms under budget constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a novel LP-based approach for prior-free mechanisms and provides the first constant approximation mechanism for subadditive functions in Bayesian settings.
Findings
O(log n)-approximation for subadditive valuations in prior-free setting
Constant approximation mechanism for all subadditive functions in Bayesian setting
Polynomial time O(log n/loglog n) approximation for subadditive valuations
Abstract
Budget feasible mechanism design studies procurement combinatorial auctions where the sellers have private costs to produce items, and the buyer(auctioneer) aims to maximize a social valuation function on subsets of items, under the budget constraint on the total payment. One of the most important questions in the field is "which valuation domains admit truthful budget feasible mechanisms with `small' approximations (compared to the social optimum)?" Singer showed that additive and submodular functions have such constant approximations. Recently, Dobzinski, Papadimitriou, and Singer gave an O(log^2 n)-approximation mechanism for subadditive functions; they also remarked that: "A fundamental question is whether, regardless of computational constraints, a constant-factor budget feasible mechanism exists for subadditive functions." We address this question from two viewpoints: prior-free…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Law, Economics, and Judicial Systems · Game Theory and Voting Systems
