Distributed Signaling Games
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Published:2020-05-14
Issue:2
Volume:8
Page:1-26
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ISSN:2167-8375
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Container-title:ACM Transactions on Economics and Computation
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language:en
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Short-container-title:ACM Trans. Econ. Comput.
Author:
Feldman Moran1,
Tennenholtz Moshe2,
Weinstein Omri3
Affiliation:
1. Microsoft Research, Israel, and University of Haifa
2. Microsoft Research, Israel, and Technion-IIT
3. Microsoft Research, Israel, and Columbia University
Abstract
A recurring theme in recent computer science literature is that proper design of signaling schemes is a crucial aspect of effective mechanisms aiming to optimize social welfare or revenue. One of the research endeavors of this line of work is understanding the algorithmic and computational complexity of designing efficient signaling schemes. In reality, however, information is typically not held by a central authority but is distributed among multiple sources (third-party “mediators”), a fact that dramatically changes the strategic and combinatorial nature of the signaling problem.
In this article, we introduce
distributed signaling games
, while using display advertising as a canonical example for introducing this foundational framework. A distributed signaling game may be a pure coordination game (i.e., a distributed optimization task) or a non-cooperative game. In the context of pure coordination games, we show a wide gap between the computational complexity of the centralized and distributed signaling problems, proving that distributed coordination on revenue-optimal signaling is a much harder problem than its “centralized” counterpart.
In the context of non-cooperative games, the outcome generated by the mediators’ signals may have different value to each. The reason for that is typically the desire of the auctioneer to align the incentives of the mediators with his own by a compensation relative to the marginal benefit from their signals. We design a mechanism for this problem via a novel application of Shapley’s value and show that it possesses some interesting properties; in particular, it always admits a pure Nash equilibrium, and it never decreases the revenue of the auctioneer (relative to his
a priori
revenue when there are no mediators).
Funder
European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
Israel Science Foundation
Simons Society Junior fellowship
NSF CAREER
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Subject
Computational Mathematics,Marketing,Economics and Econometrics,Statistics and Probability,Computer Science (miscellaneous)
Reference20 articles.
1. Agreeing to Disagree
2. Send mixed signals
3. Display Advertising Auctions with Arbitrage
4. Yu Cheng Ho Yee Cheung Shaddin Dughmi and Shang-Hua Teng. 2014. Signaling in Quasipolynomial time. (2014). arxiv:1410.3033 http://arxiv.org/abs/1410.3033. Yu Cheng Ho Yee Cheung Shaddin Dughmi and Shang-Hua Teng. 2014. Signaling in Quasipolynomial time. (2014). arxiv:1410.3033 http://arxiv.org/abs/1410.3033.