Delegation with Costly Inspection
Mohammad T. Hajiaghayi, Piotr Krysta, Mohammad Mahdavi, Suho Shin

TL;DR
This paper investigates a complex delegated choice problem involving costly inspection and strategic misreporting, providing approximation algorithms and complexity results for optimal delegation and inspection policies.
Contribution
It introduces the DCIC model, generalizes PNOI, proves NP-hardness, and develops approximation mechanisms for delegation with costly inspection and strategic agents.
Findings
A 3-approximation for costless delegation with a single inspection
NP-hardness of DCIC due to its generalization of PNOI
A constant-factor approximation mechanism for general instances
Abstract
We study the problem of delegated choice with inspection cost (DCIC), which is a variant of the delegated choice problem by Kleinberg and Kleinberg (EC'18) as well as an extension of the Pandora's box problem with nonobligatory inspection (PNOI) by Doval (JET'18). In our model, an agent may strategically misreport the proposed element's utility, unlike the standard delegated choice problem which assumes that the agent truthfully reports the utility for the proposed alternative. Thus, the principal needs to inspect the proposed element possibly along with other alternatives to maximize its own utility, given an exogenous cost of inspecting each element. Further, the delegation itself incurs a fixed cost, thus the principal can decide whether to delegate or not and inspect by herself. We show that DCIC indeed is a generalization of PNOI where the side information from a strategic agent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Game Theory and Voting Systems · Game Theory and Applications
