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  • CS Colloquia: The Price of Stability for Network Design

    Tue, Oct 16, 2007 @ 04:00 PM - 05:30 PM

    Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Title: The Price of Stability for Network Design
    Speaker: Prof. Elliot Anshelevich(RPI)ABSTRACT:
    Network design is a fundamental problem for which it is important to
    understand the effects of strategic behavior. Given a collection of
    self-interested agents who want to form a network connecting certain
    endpoints, the set of stable solutions (the Nash equilibria) may look quite
    different from the centrally enforced optimum. We study the price of
    stability, i.e. the quality of the best Nash equilibrium compared to the
    optimum network cost. The best Nash equilibrium solution has a natural meaning
    of stability in this context: it is the optimal solution that can be proposed
    from which no user will "deviate".We consider two versions of this game: one where agents may divide the cost of
    the edges they use in any manner they desire, and one where the cost of each
    such edge is divided equally between the agents whose connections make use of
    it. In the first version, determining whether or not a Nash equilibrium exists
    is NP-complete. However, when the goal of each player is to connect a terminal
    to a common source, we prove that there is a Nash equilibrium as cheap as the
    optimal network, and give a polynomial time algorithm to find a
    (1+epsilon)-approximate Nash equilibrium that does not cost much more. In the
    second version, however, a Nash equilibrium always exists and can be achieved
    via best-response dynamics. In this version we can show a tight bound of O(log
    k) on the price of stability (where k is the number of agents). I will discuss
    these results and possibly mention some extensions as well.This is joint work with: Bugra Caskurlu, Anirban Dasgupta, Jon Kleinberg, Eva
    Tardos, Tom Wexler, and Tim RoughgardenBIO:
    Elliot Anshelevich is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science at
    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell
    University in 2005, working under the direction of Jon Kleinberg and Eva
    Tardos. After receiving the NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship in Mathematics, he
    spent a year at Princeton University working with Moses Charikar. His research
    interests focus on algorithms for large decentralized networks, including
    networks with strategic agents. Particular interests include: network design
    problems, algorithmic game theory, local and decentralized routing algorithms,
    approximation algorithms, graph algorithms, and information propagation in
    both social and computer networks.

    Location: Seaver Science Library (SSL) - 150

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: CS Colloquia

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