Payoff Control in Repeated Games
Renfei Tan, Qi Su, Bin Wu, Long Wang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new mathematical framework for controlling payoffs in complex repeated games with multiple actions and players, overcoming previous limitations related to game complexity.
Contribution
It develops a general theory and algorithm for ruling strategies in multi-action, multi-player repeated games, extending payoff control beyond two-action scenarios.
Findings
Existence of ruling strategies depends on game duration and repetition probability.
The framework overcomes the curse of dimensionality in complex game settings.
It enables collaborative payoff control strategies for alliances.
Abstract
Evolutionary game theory is a powerful mathematical framework to study how intelligent individuals adjust their strategies in collective interactions. It has been widely believed that it is impossible to unilaterally control players' payoffs in games, since payoffs are jointly determined by all players. Until recently, a class of so-called zero-determinant strategies are revealed, which enables a player to make a unilateral payoff control over her partners in two-action repeated games with a constant continuation probability. The existing methods, however, lead to the curse of dimensionality when the complexity of games increases. In this paper, we propose a new mathematical framework to study ruling strategies (with which a player unilaterally makes a linear relation rule on players' payoffs) in repeated games with an arbitrary number of actions or players, and arbitrary continuation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Game Theory and Applications · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence
