Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byStephany Manning Modified over 9 years ago
1
Combinatorial Auctions without Money Dimitris Fotakis, NTUA Piotr Krysta, University of Liverpool Carmine Ventre, Teesside University
2
Main question Money pervasive in (Algorithmic) Mechanism Design to adjust incentives of algorithms. Money necessarily evil (Gibbart-Satterthwaite theorem) but… – Unavailable, morally unacceptable and sometimes at odds with the objective of the mechanism Money vs verification of agents’ behavior (and the punishment of those caught lying) in Combinatorial Auctions (CAs): – What class of algorithms can we use here? [MN02] – What is the best approximation guarantee we can achieve? [PT09]
3
Combinatorial Auctions € 1,000 € 1,200 € 350 Winner and price determination rule Lie (if profitable) € 2,200 € 20 Lie (if profitable)
4
What is the objective? Want to make society better, yet we charge bidders to enforce truthfulness!?! CAs without money for a really happy society Social welfare Revenue e.g., VCG
5
What do we know of the bidders? € 1,000 € 1,200 € 350 € 2,200 € 20 ? ? ? ? 3 sets Unknown 3-minded bidder Known 2- minded bidder
6
Verification in CAs [Krysta&V10] No overbidding on awarded set [Celik06] [Penna&V09] (and references therein) € 1,000 € 1,200 € 350 € 50 € 900 € 1,300 ? OK if outcome φ, Caught lying otherwise
7
Characterizing truthfulness
8
Backward compatibility for single minded bidders (k=1) This is [MN02, LOS01] monotonicity, known to characterize CAs with money Same class of truthful CAs! Any truthful CA with money can be turned into one without money by implementing verification
9
Approximation guarantee of monotone algorithms (any k) Recall that no O(d/log d) and no m 1/(b+1)-ε is possible in polynomial-time
10
The min{m,d+1}-apx algorithm v i (S 1 )v i (S 2 ) Exists S s.t. S intersection S 1 is nonempty S b i (S 1 ) verified
11
Lower bound on approximation (any k)
12
Lower bound for deterministic mechanisms B.c. there exists algorithm A better than 2 apx Then A must assign both {a} and {b} Wlog, say A gives {a} to the girl and {b} to the boy Now if the boy says 0 for {b}, A must keep granting him {b} (by truthfulness) A’s solution has then SW 1+δ, OPT is 2+δ A is not better than 2-apx a a b b 1+δ 1 1 0
13
Conclusions We have shown the advantages/limitations of trading verification with money in the realm of CAs – Characterization of truthfulness which makes an interesting parallel with CAs with money – Host of bounds obtained mainly via known algorithmic techniques Close the gaps Apply framework to different problems/domains
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.