Arrow Research search

Author name cluster

Shiri Ron

Possible papers associated with this exact author name in Arrow. This page groups case-insensitive exact name matches and is not a full identity disambiguation profile.

5 papers
2 author rows

Possible papers

5

AAAI Conference 2025 Conference Paper

On the Power of Randomization for Obviously Strategy-Proof Mechanisms

  • Shiri Ron
  • Daniel Schoepflin

We investigate the problem of designing randomized obviously strategyproof (OSP) mechanisms in several canonical auction settings. Obvious strategyproofness, introduced by Li [American Economic Review 2017], strengthens the well-known concept of dominant-strategy incentive compatibility (DSIC). Loosely speaking, it ensures that even agents who struggle with contingent reasoning can identify that their dominant strategy is optimal. Thus, one would hope to design OSP mechanisms with good approximation guarantees. Unfortunately, Ron [SODA 2024] has showed that deterministic OSP mechanisms fail to achieve an approximation better than the minimum of the number of items and the number of bidders, even for the simple settings of additive and unit-demand bidders. We circumvent these impossibilities by showing that randomized mechanisms that are obviously strategy-proof in the universal sense obtain a constant factor approximation for these classes. We show that this phenomenon occurs also for the setting of a multi-unit auction with single-minded bidders. Thus, our results provide a more positive outlook on the design of OSP mechanisms and exhibit a stark separation between the power of randomized and deterministic OSP mechanisms. To complement the picture, we provide lower bounds on the performance of randomized OSP mechanisms in each setting. This further demonstrates that OSP mechanisms are significantly weaker than dominant-strategy mechanisms: it is well known that the deterministic VCG mechanism outputs an optimal allocation in dominant-strategies, whereas we show that even randomized OSP mechanisms cannot obtain more than 87.5% of the optimal welfare.

FOCS Conference 2024 Conference Paper

Communication Separations for Truthful Auctions: Breaking the Two-Player Barrier

  • Shiri Ron
  • Clayton Thomas
  • S. Matthew Weinberg
  • Qianfan Zhang 0002

We study the communication complexity of truthful combinatorial auctions, and in particular the case where valuations are either subadditive or single-minded, which we denote with SubAddUSingleM. We show that for three bidders with valuations in SubAddUSingleM, any deterministic truthful mechanism that achieves at least a 0. 366-approximation requires $\exp(m)$ communication. In contrast, a natural extension of [Fei09] yields a non-truthful $\text{poly}(m)-\mathbf{communication}$ protocol that achieves a $\frac{1}{2}-\mathbf{approximation}$, demonstrating a gap between the power of truthful mechanisms and non-truthful protocols for this problem. Our approach follows the taxation complexity framework laid out in [Dob16b], but applies this framework in a setting not encompassed by the techniques used in past work. In particular, the only successful prior application of this framework uses a reduction to simultaneous protocols which only applies for two bidders [AKSW20], whereas our three-player lower bounds are stronger than what can possibly arise from a two-player construction (since a trivial truthful auction guarantees a $\frac{1}{2}- \mathbf{approximation}$ for two players).