Title
From Nash Equilibria to Chain Recurrent Sets: An Algorithmic Solution Concept for Game Theory.
Abstract
In 1950, Nash proposed a natural equilibrium solution concept for games hence called Nash equilibrium, and proved that all finite games have at least one. The proof is through a simple yet ingenious application of Brouwer's (or, in another version Kakutani's) fixed point theorem, the most sophisticated result in his era's topologyin fact, recent algorithmic work has established that Nash equilibria are computationally equivalent to fixed points. In this paper, we propose a new class of universal non-equilibrium solution concepts arising from an important theorem in the topology of dynamical systems that was unavailable to Nash. This approach starts with both a game and a learning dynamics, defined over mixed strategies. The Nash equilibria are fixpoints of the dynamics, but the system behavior is captured by an object far more general than the Nash equilibrium that is known in dynamical systems theory as chain recurrent set. Informally, once we focus on this solution conceptthis notion of the outcome of the gameevery game behaves like a potential game with the dynamics converging to these states. In other words, unlike Nash equilibria, this solution concept is algorithmic in the sense that it has a constructive proof of existence. We characterize this solution for simple benchmark games under replicator dynamics, arguably the best known evolutionary dynamics in game theory. For (weighted) potential games, the new concept coincides with the fixpoints/equilibria of the dynamics. However, in (variants of) zero-sum games with fully mixed (i.e., interior) Nash equilibria, it covers the whole state space, as the dynamics satisfy specific information theoretic constants of motion. We discuss numerous novel computational, as well as structural, combinatorial questions raised by this chain recurrence conception of games.
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.3390/e20100782
ENTROPY
Keywords
Field
DocType
algorithmic game theory,replicator dynamics,invariant,Kullback-Leibler divergence
Mathematical optimization,Game theory,Solution concept,Nash equilibrium,Mathematics
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
20
10
1099-4300
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.37
5
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Christos H. Papadimitriou1166713192.54
Georgios Piliouras225042.77