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The Computational Complexity of Nash Equilibria in Concisely Represented Games

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2012

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Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
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Schoenebeck, Grant R., and Salil Vadhan. 2012. The Computational Complexity of Nash Equilibria in Concisely Represented Games. ACM Transactions on Computation Theory 4, no. 2: 1–50.

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Games may be represented in many different ways, and different representations of games affect the complexity of problems associated with games, such as finding a Nash equilibrium. The traditional method of representing a game is to explicitly list all the payoffs, but this incurs an exponential blowup as the number of agents grows. We study two models of concisely represented games: circuit games, where the payoffs are computed by a given boolean circuit, and graph games, where each agent’s payoff is a function of only the strategies played by its neighbors in a given graph. For these two models, we study the complexity of four questions: determining if a given strategy is a Nash equilibrium, finding a Nash equilibrium, determining if there exists a pure Nash equilibrium, and determining if there exists a Nash equilibrium in which the payoffs to a player meet some given guarantees. In many cases, we obtain tight results, showing that the problems are complete for various complexity classes.

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