Logo: University of Southern California

Events Calendar


  • CS Colloquia: Bertrand Competition in Networks

    Thu, Jan 17, 2008 @ 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM

    Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Title: Bertrand Competition in NetworksSpeaker: Prof. Shuchi Chawla (Wisconsin)ABSTRACT:
    The Internet is a unique modern artifact given its sheer size and the
    number of its users. Given its continuing distributed and ad-hoc
    evolution, there have been growing concerns about the effectiveness of
    its current routing protocols in finding good routes and ensuring
    quality of service. Imposing congestion-based and QoS-based prices on
    traffic has been suggested as a way of combating the ills of this
    distributed growth and selfish use of resources. Unfortunately, the
    effectiveness of such approaches relies on the cooperation of the
    multiple entities implementing them, namely the ISPs or Internet
    service providers. The goals of the ISPs do not necessarily align with
    the social objectives of efficiency and quality of service; their
    primary objective is to maximize their own profit. It is therefore
    imperative to study the following question: given a large
    combinatorial market such as the Internet, suppose that the owners of
    resources selfishly price their product to maximize their own profit,
    and consumers selfishly purchase resources to maximize their own
    utility, how does this effect the functioning of the market as a
    whole?We study this problem in the context of a simple network pricing game,
    and analyze the performance of equilibria arising in this game as a
    function of the degree of competition in the game, the network
    topology, and the demand structure. Economists have traditionally
    studied such questions in single-item markets. It is well known, for
    example, that monopolies cause inefficiency in a market by charging
    high prices, whereas competition has the effect of driving prices down
    and operating efficiently. Our work extends the classical Bertrand
    model of competition from economics to the network setting. For
    example, we ask: is competition in a network enough to ensure
    efficient operation? does performance worsen as the number of
    monopolies grows? does the answer depend in an interesting way on the
    network topology and/or demand distribution? We provide tight bounds
    on the performance (efficiency) of the network.This is joint work with Tim Roughgarden.BIO:
    Shuchi Chawla is an assistant professor of Computer Science at
    University of Wisconsin - Madison. She received her PhD in 2005 from
    Carnegie Mellon University and her Bachelor of Technology degree from
    the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India in 2000. Her research
    interests lie in theoretical computer science, with emphasis towards
    approximation algorithms, combinatorial optimization, and game theory.
    Shuchi is the recepient of an NSF CAREER award and an IBM Ph.D.
    fellowship.

    Location: Hughes Aircraft Electrical Engineering Center (EEB) - 248

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: CS Colloquia

    Add to Google CalendarDownload ICS File for OutlookDownload iCal File

Return to Calendar