PROTECT: An Application of Computational Game Theory for the Security of the Ports of the United States

Abstract

Building upon previous security applications of computational game theory, this paper presents PROTECT, a game-theoretic system deployed by the United States Coast Guard (USCG) in the port of Boston for scheduling their patrols. USCG has termed the deployment of PROTECT in Boston a success, and efforts are underway to test it in the port of New York, with the potential for nationwide deployment. PROTECT is premised on an attacker-defender Stackelberg game model and offers five key innovations. First, this system is a departure from the assumption of perfect adversary rationality noted in previous work, relying instead on a quantal response (QR) model of the adversary's behavior - to the best of our knowledge, this is the first real-world deployment of the QR model. Second, to improve PROTECT's efficiency, we generate a compact representation of the defender's strategy space, exploiting equivalence and dominance. Third, we show how to practically model a real maritime patrolling problem as a Stackelberg game. Fourth, our experimental results illustrate that PROTECT's QR model more robustly handles real-world uncertainties than a perfect rationality model. Finally, in evaluating PROTECT, this paper provides real-world data: (i) comparison of human-generated vs PROTECT security schedules, and (ii) results from an Adversarial Perspective Team's (human mock attackers) analysis.

Cite

Text

Shieh et al. "PROTECT: An Application of Computational Game Theory for the Security of the Ports of the United States." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2012. doi:10.1609/AAAI.V26I1.8436

Markdown

[Shieh et al. "PROTECT: An Application of Computational Game Theory for the Security of the Ports of the United States." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2012.](https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2012/shieh2012aaai-protect/) doi:10.1609/AAAI.V26I1.8436

BibTeX

@inproceedings{shieh2012aaai-protect,
  title     = {{PROTECT: An Application of Computational Game Theory for the Security of the Ports of the United States}},
  author    = {Shieh, Eric Anyung and An, Bo and Yang, Rong and Tambe, Milind and Baldwin, Craig and DiRenzo, Joseph and Maule, Ben and Meyer, Garrett},
  booktitle = {AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
  year      = {2012},
  pages     = {2173-2179},
  doi       = {10.1609/AAAI.V26I1.8436},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2012/shieh2012aaai-protect/}
}