Emergent Mind

Computing Stackelberg Equilibria of Large General-Sum Games

(1909.03319)
Published Sep 7, 2019 in cs.GT

Abstract

We study the computational complexity of finding Stackelberg Equilibria in general-sum games, where the set of pure strategies of the leader and the followers are exponentially large in a natrual representation of the problem. In \emph{zero-sum} games, the notion of a Stackelberg equilibrium coincides with the notion of a \emph{Nash Equilibrium}~\cite{korzhyk2011stackelberg}. Finding these equilibrium concepts in zero-sum games can be efficiently done when the players have polynomially many pure strategies or when (in additional to some structural properties) a best-response oracle is available~\cite{ahmadinejad2016duels, DHL+17, KV05}. Despite such advancements in the case of zero-sum games, little is known for general-sum games. In light of the above, we examine the computational complexity of computing a Stackelberg equilibrium in large general-sum games. We show that while there are natural large general-sum games where the Stackelberg Equilibria can be computed efficiently if the Nash equilibrium in its zero-sum form could be computed efficiently, in general, structural properties that allow for efficient computation of Nash equilibrium in zero-sum games are not sufficient for computing Stackelberg equilibria in general-sum games.

We're not able to analyze this paper right now due to high demand.

Please check back later (sorry!).

Generate a summary of this paper on our Pro plan:

We ran into a problem analyzing this paper.

Newsletter

Get summaries of trending comp sci papers delivered straight to your inbox:

Unsubscribe anytime.