Economics and Computation Series

Existence and Complexity of Approximate Equilibria in Weighted Congestion Games

4th March 2020, 13:00 add to calender
Martin Gairing
University of Liverpool

Abstract

We study the existence of approximate pure Nash equilibria (alpha -PNE) in weighted atomic congestion games with polynomial cost functions of maximum degree d. Previously it was known that d-approximate equilibria always exist, while nonexistence was established only for small constants, namely for 1.153-PNE. We improve significantly upon this gap, proving that such games, in general, do not have ~?(sqrt(d))-approximate PNE, which provides the first super-constant lower bound.

Furthermore, we provide a black-box gap-introducing method of combining such nonexistence results with a specific circuit gadget, in order to derive NP-completeness of the decision version of the problem. In particular, deploying this technique we are able to show that deciding whether a weighted congestion game has an ˜O(sqrt(d))-PNE is NP-complete. Previous hardness results were known only for the special case of exact equilibria and arbitrary cost functions.

The circuit gadget is of independent interest and it allows us to also prove hardness for a variety of problems related to the complexity of PNE in congestion games. For example, we demonstrate that the question of existence of alpha -PNE in which a certain set of players plays a specific strategy profile is NP-hard for any alpha < 3^(d/2), even for unweighted congestion games.

Finally, we study the existence of approximate equilibria in weighted congestion games with general (nondecreasing) costs, as a function of the number of players n. We show that n-PNE always
exist, matched by an almost tight nonexistence bound of ?(n) which we can again transform into an NP-completeness proof for the decision problem.
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