arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1103.2709 [cs.GT]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

A Survey of PPAD-Completeness for Computing Nash Equilibria

Paul W. Goldberg

Published 2011-03-14, updated 2011-03-16Version 2

PPAD refers to a class of computational problems for which solutions are guaranteed to exist due to a specific combinatorial principle. The most well-known such problem is that of computing a Nash equilibrium of a game. Other examples include the search for market equilibria, and envy-free allocations in the context of cake-cutting. A problem is said to be complete for PPAD if it belongs to PPAD and can be shown to constitute one of the hardest computational challenges within that class. In this paper, I give a relatively informal overview of the proofs used in the PPAD-completeness results. The focus is on the mixed Nash equilibria guaranteed to exist by Nash's theorem. I also give an overview of some recent work that uses these ideas to show PSPACE-completeness for the computation of specific equilibria found by homotopy methods. I give a brief introduction to related problems of searching for market equilibria.

Comments: 32 pages, 10 figures, 23rd British Combinatorial Conference
Categories: cs.GT, cs.CC
Subjects: 90C60, 68Q25, 91A10, F.1.3
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:2012.07082 [cs.GT] (Published 2020-12-13, updated 2020-12-22)
Computing Nash equilibria for integer programming games
arXiv:0704.1678 [cs.GT] (Published 2007-04-12)
Settling the Complexity of Computing Two-Player Nash Equilibria
arXiv:0707.0891 [cs.GT] (Published 2007-07-06)
The Nash Equilibrium Revisited: Chaos and Complexity Hidden in Simplicity