Multi-Agent Learning for Iterative Dominance Elimination: Formal Barriers and New Algorithms

Aug 1, 2022·
Jibang Wu
,
Haifeng Xu
Fan Yao
Fan Yao
· 0 min read
Abstract
Under the uncoupled learning setup, the last-iterate convergence guarantee towards Nash equilibrium is shown to be impossible in many games. This work studies the last-iterate convergence guarantee in general games toward rationalizability, a key solution concept in epistemic game theory that relaxes the stringent belief assumptions in both Nash and correlated equilibrium. This learning task naturally generalizes best arm identification problems, due to the intrinsic connections between rationalizable action profiles and the elimination of iteratively dominated actions. Despite a seemingly simple task, our first main result is a surprisingly negative one; that is, a large and natural class of no regret algorithms, including the entire family of Dual Averaging algorithms, provably take exponentially many rounds to reach rationalizability. Moreover, algorithms with the stronger no swap regret also suffer similar exponential inefficiency. To overcome these barriers, we develop a new algorithm that adjusts Exp3 with Diminishing Historical rewards (termed Exp3-DH); Exp3-DH gradually “forgets” history at carefully tailored rates. We prove that when all agents run Exp3-DH (a.k.a., self-play in multi-agent learning), all iteratively dominated actions can be eliminated within polynomially many rounds. Our experimental results further demonstrate the efficiency of Exp3-DH, and that state-of-the-art bandit algorithms, even those developed specifically for learning in games, fail to reach rationalizability efficiently.
Type
Publication
COLT, 2022
publications
Fan Yao
Authors
Assistant Professor

I am an assistant professor in the Department of Statistics and Operations Research (STOR) at UNC Chapel Hill. I received my PhD in Computer Science from the University of Virginia, advised by Haifeng Xu and Hongning Wang. Prior to obtaining my PhD, I spent two years at the University of Chicago and received both my BS and MS in Computational Mathematics from Peking University. My CV is available here.

My research interests include social and ethical aspects of AI, human-centered machine learning, strategic and multi-agent systems, recommender systems and digital platform economy. If you share similar interests, feel free to contact me via email. Prospective students are encouraged to review this before contacting me.

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Current status: ☕️ In Chapel Hill (☕️regular ✈️traveling 🏖vacation ⏳deadline mode)