Publication:
Peer Prediction with Heterogeneous Users

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2017

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ACM Press
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Agarwal, Arpit, Debmalya Mandal, David Parkes, and Nisarg Shah. 2017. Peer Prediction with Heterogeneous Users. Proceedings of the 2017 ACM Conference on Economics and Computation, Cambridge, MA, June 26 - 30, 2017, 81-98.

Research Data

Abstract

Peer prediction mechanisms incentivize agents to truthfully report their signals, in the absence of a verification mechanism, by comparing their reports with those of their peers. Prior work in this area is essentially restricted to the case of homogeneous agents, whose signal distributions are identical. This is limiting in many domains, where we would expect agents to differ in taste, judgment and reliability. Although the Correlated Agreement (CA) mechanism [30] can be extended to handle heterogeneous agents, the new challenge is with the efficient estimation of agent signal types. We solve this problem by clustering agents based on their reporting behavior, proposing a mechanism that works with clusters of agents and designing algorithms that learn such a clustering. In this way, we also connect peer prediction with the Dawid and Skene [5] literature on latent types. We retain the robustness against coordinated misreports of the CA mechanism, achieving an approximate incentive guarantee of ε-informed truthfulness. We show on real data that this incentive approximation is reasonable in practice, and even with a small number of clusters.

Description

Other Available Sources

Keywords

Terms of Use

Metadata Only

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories