Safe Equilibrium

Abstract

The standard game-theoretic solution concept, Nash equilibrium, assumes that all players behave rationally. If we follow a Nash equilibrium and opponents are irrational (or follow strategies from a different Nash equilibrium), then we may obtain an extremely low payoff. On the other hand, a maximin strategy assumes that all opposing agents are playing to minimize our payoff (even if it is not in their best interest), and ensures the maximal possible worst-case payoff, but results in exceedingly conservative play. We propose a new solution concept called safe equilibrium that models opponents as behaving rationally with a specified probability and behaving potentially arbitrarily with the remaining probability. We prove that a safe equilibrium exists in all strategic-form games (for all possible values of the rationality parameters), and prove that its computation is PPAD-hard.

Cite

Text

Ganzfried. "Safe Equilibrium." NeurIPS 2023 Workshops: MASEC, 2023.

Markdown

[Ganzfried. "Safe Equilibrium." NeurIPS 2023 Workshops: MASEC, 2023.](https://mlanthology.org/neuripsw/2023/ganzfried2023neuripsw-safe/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{ganzfried2023neuripsw-safe,
  title     = {{Safe Equilibrium}},
  author    = {Ganzfried, Sam},
  booktitle = {NeurIPS 2023 Workshops: MASEC},
  year      = {2023},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neuripsw/2023/ganzfried2023neuripsw-safe/}
}