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The Cost of Denied Observation in Multiagent Submodular Optimization (2009.05018v2)

Published 10 Sep 2020 in cs.GT, cs.DC, cs.SY, and eess.SY

Abstract: A popular formalism for multiagent control applies tools from game theory, casting a multiagent decision problem as a cooperation-style game in which individual agents make local choices to optimize their own local utility functions in response to the observable choices made by other agents. When the system-level objective is submodular maximization, it is known that if every agent can observe the action choice of all other agents, then all Nash equilibria of a large class of resulting games are within a factor of $2$ of optimal; that is, the price of anarchy is $1/2$. However, little is known if agents cannot observe the action choices of other relevant agents. To study this, we extend the standard game-theoretic model to one in which a subset of agents either become \emph{blind} (unable to observe others' choices) or \emph{isolated} (blind, and also invisible to other agents), and we prove exact expressions for the price of anarchy as a function of the number of compromised agents. When $k$ agents are compromised (in any combination of blind or isolated), we show that the price of anarchy for a large class of utility functions is exactly $1/(2+k)$. We then show that if agents use marginal-cost utility functions and at least $1$ of the compromised agents is blind (rather than isolated), the price of anarchy improves to $1/(1+k)$. We also provide simulation results demonstrating the effects of these observation denials in a dynamic setting.

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Authors (4)
  1. David Grimsman (13 papers)
  2. Joshua H. Seaton (1 paper)
  3. Jason R. Marden (106 papers)
  4. Philip N. Brown (28 papers)
Citations (5)

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