2 research outputs found
Multiplayer Cost Games with Simple Nash Equilibria
Multiplayer games with selfish agents naturally occur in the design of
distributed and embedded systems. As the goals of selfish agents are usually
neither equivalent nor antagonistic to each other, such games are non zero-sum
games. We study such games and show that a large class of these games,
including games where the individual objectives are mean- or discounted-payoff,
or quantitative reachability, and show that they do not only have a solution,
but a simple solution. We establish the existence of Nash equilibria that are
composed of k memoryless strategies for each agent in a setting with k agents,
one main and k-1 minor strategies. The main strategy describes what happens
when all agents comply, whereas the minor strategies ensure that all other
agents immediately start to co-operate against the agent who first deviates
from the plan. This simplicity is important, as rational agents are an
idealisation. Realistically, agents have to decide on their moves with very
limited resources, and complicated strategies that require exponential--or even
non-elementary--implementations cannot realistically be implemented. The
existence of simple strategies that we prove in this paper therefore holds a
promise of implementability.Comment: 23 page
Model Checking Real-Time Systems
International audienceThis chapter surveys timed automata as a formalism for model checking real-time systems. We begin with introducing the model, as an extension of finite-state automata with real-valued variables for measuring time. We then present the main model-checking results in this framework, and give a hint about several recent extensions (namely weighted timed automata and timed games)