Home » Publication » 26534

Dettaglio pubblicazione

2022, Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics), Pages 149-166 (volume: 13112)

Allocating Indivisible Goods to Strategic Agents: Pure Nash Equilibria and Fairness (04b Atto di convegno in volume)

Amanatidis G., Birmpas G., Fusco F., Lazos Filippos., Leonardi S., Reiffenhauser R.

We consider the problem of fairly allocating a set of indivisible goods to a set of strategic agents with additive valuation functions. We assume no monetary transfers and, therefore, a mechanism in our setting is an algorithm that takes as input the reported—rather than the true—values of the agents. Our main goal is to explore whether there exist mechanisms that have pure Nash equilibria for every instance and, at the same time, provide fairness guarantees for the allocations that correspond to these equilibria. We focus on two relaxations of envy-freeness, namely envy-freeness up to one good (EF 1 ), and envy-freeness up to any good (EFX ), and we positively answer the above question. In particular, we study two algorithms that are known to produce such allocations in the non-strategic setting: Round-Robin (EF 1 allocations for any number of agents) and a cut and choose algorithm of Plaut and Roughgarden [35] (EFX allocations for two agents). For Round-Robin we show that all of its pure Nash equilibria induce allocations that are EF 1 with respect to the underlying true values, while for the algorithm of Plaut and Roughgarden we show that the corresponding allocations not only are EFX but also satisfy maximin share fairness, something that is not true for this algorithm in the non-strategic setting! Further, we show that a weaker version of the latter result holds for any mechanism for two agents that always has pure Nash equilibria which all induce EFX allocations.
ISBN: 978-3-030-94675-3; 978-3-030-94676-0
Gruppo di ricerca: Algorithms and Data Science
keywords
© Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" - Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Roma