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H.B. Keller Colloquium

Monday, November 11, 2024
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Annenberg 105
Multi-agent higher-order learning vs Nash equilibrium
Jeff Shamma, Department Head and Jerry S. Dobrovolny Chair, Industrial and Enterprise Systems Engineering, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign,

The framework of multi-agent learning explores the dynamics of how individual agent strategies evolve in response to the evolving strategies of other agents. Of particular interest is whether agent strategies converge to well-known solution concepts such as Nash Equilibrium (NE). Most "fixed order" learning dynamics restrict an agent's underlying state to be its own strategy. In "higher order" learning, agent dynamics can include auxiliary states that can capture phenomena such as path dependencies. We introduce higher-order gradient play dynamics that resemble projected gradient ascent with auxiliary states. The dynamics are "payoff based" in that each agent's dynamics depend on its own evolving payoff. While realized payoffs depend on the strategies of other agents in a game setting, agent dynamics do not depend explicitly on the nature of the game or the strategies of other agents. In this sense, dynamics are "uncoupled" since an agent's dynamics do not depend explicitly on the utility functions of other agents. We first show that for any specific game with an isolated completely mixed-strategy NE, there exist higher-order gradient play dynamics that lead (locally) to that NE, both for the specific game and nearby games with perturbed utility functions. Conversely, we show that for any higher-order gradient play dynamics, there exists a game with a unique isolated completely mixed-strategy NE for which the dynamics do not lead to NE. These results build on prior work that showed that uncoupled fixed-order learning cannot lead to NE in certain instances, whereas higher-order variants can. Finally, we consider the mixed-strategy equilibrium associated with coordination games. While higher-order gradient play can converge to such equilibria, we show such dynamics must be inherently irrational.

For more information, please contact Narin Seraydarian by phone at (626) 395-6580 or by email at [email protected].