Designing Networks with Good Equilibria under Uncertainty
George Christodoulou, Alkmini Sgouritsa

TL;DR
This paper investigates the design of network protocols with good equilibrium properties under uncertainty, analyzing both adversarial and stochastic models, and demonstrating the impact of prior knowledge on protocol efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces new models for network design under uncertainty, showing how prior metric knowledge affects the Price of Anarchy and developing novel combinatorial techniques.
Findings
Prior metric knowledge can significantly improve network design in some graphs.
Universal protocols can have a logarithmic lower bound on PoA in certain metrics.
Randomized and deterministic protocols achieve constant PoA in stochastic models.
Abstract
We consider the problem of designing network cost-sharing protocols with good equilibria under uncertainty. The underlying game is a multicast game in a rooted undirected graph with nonnegative edge costs. A set of k terminal vertices or players need to establish connectivity with the root. The social optimum is the Minimum Steiner Tree. We are interested in situations where the designer has incomplete information about the input. We propose two different models, the adversarial and the stochastic. In both models, the designer has prior knowledge of the underlying metric but the requested subset of the players is not known and is activated either in an adversarial manner (adversarial model) or is drawn from a known probability distribution (stochastic model). In the adversarial model, the designer's goal is to choose a single, universal protocol that has low Price of Anarchy (PoA) for…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGame Theory and Applications · Distributed systems and fault tolerance
