Persuasion with Limited Communication
Shaddin Dughmi, David Kempe, Ruixin Qiang

TL;DR
This paper studies how limited communication affects optimal information design in bilateral trade, providing bounds, algorithms, and complexity results for welfare and revenue objectives under signaling constraints.
Contribution
It introduces tight bounds and efficient algorithms for welfare-maximizing signaling schemes with limited signals, and establishes complexity results for revenue and general Bayesian persuasion settings.
Findings
O(log(n) log(1/ε)) signals suffice for near-optimal welfare
Efficient algorithm for welfare approximation with M signals
NP-hardness of approximating optimal sender utility with communication constraints
Abstract
We examine information structure design, also called "persuasion" or "signaling", in the presence of a constraint on the amount of communication. We focus on the fundamental setting of bilateral trade, which in its simplest form involves a seller with a single item to price, a buyer whose value for the item is drawn from a common prior distribution over different possible values, and a take-it-or-leave-it-offer protocol. A mediator with access to the buyer's type may partially reveal such information to the seller in order to further some objective such as the social welfare or the seller's revenue. In the setting of maximizing welfare under bilateral trade, we show that signals suffice for a approximation to the optimal welfare, and this bound is tight. As our main result, we exhibit an efficient algorithm for computing a…
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