Computing Bayes Nash Equilibrium Strategies in Auction Games via Simultaneous Online Dual Averaging
Martin Bichler, Maximilian Fichtl, Matthias Oberlechner

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel algorithmic framework using online optimization to compute approximate Bayes Nash equilibria in auction games with continuous types and actions, achieving high speed and accuracy.
Contribution
The authors introduce a discretization and online learning approach that converges to approximate equilibria in continuous auction games without shape assumptions on bid functions.
Findings
The method approximates analytical equilibria closely in various auction models.
Convergence to equilibrium is achieved rapidly, often within seconds for symmetric agents.
The approach is flexible, handling interdependent valuations and diverse utility functions.
Abstract
Auctions are modeled as Bayesian games with continuous type and action spaces. Determining equilibria in auction games is computationally hard in general and no exact solution theory is known. We introduce an algorithmic framework in which we discretize type and action space and then learn distributional strategies via online optimization algorithms. One advantage of distributional strategies is that we do not have to make any assumptions on the shape of the bid function. Besides, the expected utility of agents is linear in the strategies. It follows that if our optimization algorithms converge to a pure strategy, then they converge to an approximate equilibrium of the discretized game with high precision. Importantly, we show that the equilibrium of the discretized game approximates an equilibrium in the continuous game. In a wide variety of auction games, we provide empirical evidence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies · Advanced Bandit Algorithms Research
