1,621 research outputs found
Sequential Posted Price Mechanisms with Correlated Valuations
We study the revenue performance of sequential posted price mechanisms and
some natural extensions, for a general setting where the valuations of the
buyers are drawn from a correlated distribution. Sequential posted price
mechanisms are conceptually simple mechanisms that work by proposing a
take-it-or-leave-it offer to each buyer. We apply sequential posted price
mechanisms to single-parameter multi-unit settings in which each buyer demands
only one item and the mechanism can assign the service to at most k of the
buyers. For standard sequential posted price mechanisms, we prove that with the
valuation distribution having finite support, no sequential posted price
mechanism can extract a constant fraction of the optimal expected revenue, even
with unlimited supply. We extend this result to the the case of a continuous
valuation distribution when various standard assumptions hold simultaneously.
In fact, it turns out that the best fraction of the optimal revenue that is
extractable by a sequential posted price mechanism is proportional to ratio of
the highest and lowest possible valuation. We prove that for two simple
generalizations of these mechanisms, a better revenue performance can be
achieved: if the sequential posted price mechanism has for each buyer the
option of either proposing an offer or asking the buyer for its valuation, then
a Omega(1/max{1,d}) fraction of the optimal revenue can be extracted, where d
denotes the degree of dependence of the valuations, ranging from complete
independence (d=0) to arbitrary dependence (d=n-1). Moreover, when we
generalize the sequential posted price mechanisms further, such that the
mechanism has the ability to make a take-it-or-leave-it offer to the i-th buyer
that depends on the valuations of all buyers except i's, we prove that a
constant fraction (2-sqrt{e})/4~0.088 of the optimal revenue can be always be
extracted.Comment: 29 pages, To appear in WINE 201
Budget Constrained Auctions with Heterogeneous Items
In this paper, we present the first approximation algorithms for the problem
of designing revenue optimal Bayesian incentive compatible auctions when there
are multiple (heterogeneous) items and when bidders can have arbitrary demand
and budget constraints. Our mechanisms are surprisingly simple: We show that a
sequential all-pay mechanism is a 4 approximation to the revenue of the optimal
ex-interim truthful mechanism with discrete correlated type space for each
bidder. We also show that a sequential posted price mechanism is a O(1)
approximation to the revenue of the optimal ex-post truthful mechanism when the
type space of each bidder is a product distribution that satisfies the standard
hazard rate condition. We further show a logarithmic approximation when the
hazard rate condition is removed, and complete the picture by showing that
achieving a sub-logarithmic approximation, even for regular distributions and
one bidder, requires pricing bundles of items. Our results are based on
formulating novel LP relaxations for these problems, and developing generic
rounding schemes from first principles. We believe this approach will be useful
in other Bayesian mechanism design contexts.Comment: Final version accepted to STOC '10. Incorporates significant reviewer
comment
Pricing Multi-Unit Markets
We study the power and limitations of posted prices in multi-unit markets,
where agents arrive sequentially in an arbitrary order. We prove upper and
lower bounds on the largest fraction of the optimal social welfare that can be
guaranteed with posted prices, under a range of assumptions about the
designer's information and agents' valuations. Our results provide insights
about the relative power of uniform and non-uniform prices, the relative
difficulty of different valuation classes, and the implications of different
informational assumptions. Among other results, we prove constant-factor
guarantees for agents with (symmetric) subadditive valuations, even in an
incomplete-information setting and with uniform prices
Prophet Inequalities with Limited Information
In the classical prophet inequality, a gambler observes a sequence of
stochastic rewards and must decide, for each reward ,
whether to keep it and stop the game or to forfeit the reward forever and
reveal the next value . The gambler's goal is to obtain a constant
fraction of the expected reward that the optimal offline algorithm would get.
Recently, prophet inequalities have been generalized to settings where the
gambler can choose items, and, more generally, where he can choose any
independent set in a matroid. However, all the existing algorithms require the
gambler to know the distribution from which the rewards are
drawn.
The assumption that the gambler knows the distribution from which
are drawn is very strong. Instead, we work with the much simpler
assumption that the gambler only knows a few samples from this distribution. We
construct the first single-sample prophet inequalities for many settings of
interest, whose guarantees all match the best possible asymptotically,
\emph{even with full knowledge of the distribution}. Specifically, we provide a
novel single-sample algorithm when the gambler can choose any elements
whose analysis is based on random walks with limited correlation. In addition,
we provide a black-box method for converting specific types of solutions to the
related \emph{secretary problem} to single-sample prophet inequalities, and
apply it to several existing algorithms. Finally, we provide a constant-sample
prophet inequality for constant-degree bipartite matchings.
We apply these results to design the first posted-price and multi-dimensional
auction mechanisms with limited information in settings with asymmetric
bidders
Mechanism Design via Correlation Gap
For revenue and welfare maximization in single-dimensional Bayesian settings,
Chawla et al. (STOC10) recently showed that sequential posted-price mechanisms
(SPMs), though simple in form, can perform surprisingly well compared to the
optimal mechanisms. In this paper, we give a theoretical explanation of this
fact, based on a connection to the notion of correlation gap.
Loosely speaking, for auction environments with matroid constraints, we can
relate the performance of a mechanism to the expectation of a monotone
submodular function over a random set. This random set corresponds to the
winner set for the optimal mechanism, which is highly correlated, and
corresponds to certain demand set for SPMs, which is independent. The notion of
correlation gap of Agrawal et al.\ (SODA10) quantifies how much we {}"lose" in
the expectation of the function by ignoring correlation in the random set, and
hence bounds our loss in using certain SPM instead of the optimal mechanism.
Furthermore, the correlation gap of a monotone and submodular function is known
to be small, and it follows that certain SPM can approximate the optimal
mechanism by a good constant factor.
Exploiting this connection, we give tight analysis of a greedy-based SPM of
Chawla et al.\ for several environments. In particular, we show that it gives
an -approximation for matroid environments, gives asymptotically a
-approximation for the important sub-case of -unit
auctions, and gives a -approximation for environments with
-independent set system constraints
Improved Revenue Bounds for Posted-Price and Second-Price Mechanisms
We study revenue maximization through sequential posted-price (SPP)
mechanisms in single-dimensional settings with buyers and independent but
not necessarily identical value distributions. We construct the SPP mechanisms
by considering the best of two simple pricing rules: one that imitates the
revenue optimal mchanism, namely the Myersonian mechanism, via the taxation
principle and the other that posts a uniform price. Our pricing rules are
rather generalizable and yield the first improvement over long-established
approximation factors in several settings. We design factor-revealing
mathematical programs that crisply capture the approximation factor of our SPP
mechanism. In the single-unit setting, our SPP mechanism yields a better
approximation factor than the state of the art prior to our work (Azar,
Chiplunkar & Kaplan, 2018). In the multi-unit setting, our SPP mechanism yields
the first improved approximation factor over the state of the art after over
nine years (Yan, 2011 and Chakraborty et al., 2010). Our results on SPP
mechanisms immediately imply improved performance guarantees for the equivalent
free-order prophet inequality problem. In the position auction setting, our SPP
mechanism yields the first higher-than approximation factor. In eager
second-price (ESP) auctions, our two simple pricing rules lead to the first
improved approximation factor that is strictly greater than what is obtained by
the SPP mechanism in the single-unit setting.Comment: Accepted to Operations Researc
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