Multi-parameter Mechanisms with Implicit Payment Computation
Moshe Babaioff, Robert Kleinberg, Aleksandrs Slivkins

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that payment computation is not an obstacle in designing truthful multi-parameter mechanisms with limited allocation calls, introducing a reduction that converts cyclic monotone rules into truthful mechanisms with minimal welfare loss.
Contribution
It introduces a general reduction from cyclic monotone allocation rules to truthful mechanisms with a single call, applicable in complex multi-parameter settings like sponsored search auctions.
Findings
A reduction method for truthful mechanisms with one allocation call
A cyclic-monotone allocation rule for sponsored search auctions
Proof of near-optimal social welfare with the new mechanism
Abstract
In this paper we show that payment computation essentially does not present any obstacle in designing truthful mechanisms, even for multi-parameter domains, and even when we can only call the allocation rule once. We present a general reduction that takes any allocation rule which satisfies "cyclic monotonicity" (a known necessary and sufficient condition for truthfulness) and converts it to a truthful mechanism using a single call to the allocation rule, with arbitrarily small loss to the expected social welfare. A prominent example for a multi-parameter setting in which an allocation rule can only be called once arises in sponsored search auctions. These are multi-parameter domains when each advertiser has multiple possible ads he may display, each with a different value per click. Moreover, the mechanism typically does not have complete knowledge of the click-realization or the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies · Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing
