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Learning Utilities and Equilibria in Non-Truthful Auctions

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  • Hu Fu
  • Tao Lin

Abstract

In non-truthful auctions, agents' utility for a strategy depends on the strategies of the opponents and also the prior distribution over their private types; the set of Bayes Nash equilibria generally has an intricate dependence on the prior. Using the First Price Auction as our main demonstrating example, we show that $\tilde O(n / \epsilon^2)$ samples from the prior with $n$ agents suffice for an algorithm to learn the interim utilities for all monotone bidding strategies. As a consequence, this number of samples suffice for learning all approximate equilibria. We give almost matching (up to polylog factors) lower bound on the sample complexity for learning utilities. We also consider a setting where agents must pay a search cost to discover their own types. Drawing on a connection between this setting and the first price auction, discovered recently by Kleinberg et al. (2016), we show that $\tilde O(n / \epsilon^2)$ samples suffice for utilities and equilibria to be estimated in a near welfare-optimal descending auction in this setting. En route, we improve the sample complexity bound, recently obtained by Guo et al. (2021), for the Pandora's Box problem, which is a classical model for sequential consumer search.

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  • Hu Fu & Tao Lin, 2020. "Learning Utilities and Equilibria in Non-Truthful Auctions," Papers 2007.01722, arXiv.org, revised Oct 2022.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2007.01722
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    7. Jason D. Hartline & Brendan Lucier, 2015. "Non-optimal Mechanism Design," American Economic Review, American Economic Association, vol. 105(10), pages 3102-3124, October.
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