28 research outputs found
Theoretical and Practical Advances on Smoothing for Extensive-Form Games
Sparse iterative methods, in particular first-order methods, are known to be
among the most effective in solving large-scale two-player zero-sum
extensive-form games. The convergence rates of these methods depend heavily on
the properties of the distance-generating function that they are based on. We
investigate the acceleration of first-order methods for solving extensive-form
games through better design of the dilated entropy function---a class of
distance-generating functions related to the domains associated with the
extensive-form games. By introducing a new weighting scheme for the dilated
entropy function, we develop the first distance-generating function for the
strategy spaces of sequential games that has no dependence on the branching
factor of the player. This result improves the convergence rate of several
first-order methods by a factor of , where is the branching
factor of the player, and is the depth of the game tree.
Thus far, counterfactual regret minimization methods have been faster in
practice, and more popular, than first-order methods despite their
theoretically inferior convergence rates. Using our new weighting scheme and
practical tuning we show that, for the first time, the excessive gap technique
can be made faster than the fastest counterfactual regret minimization
algorithm, CFR+, in practice