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ICLR 2024

Generative Adversarial Equilibrium Solvers

Conference Paper Accept (poster) Artificial Intelligence ยท Machine Learning

Abstract

We introduce the use of generative adversarial learning to compute equilibria in general game-theoretic settings, specifically the generalized Nash equilibrium (GNE) in pseudo-games, and its specific instantiation as the competitive equilibrium (CE) in Arrow-Debreu competitive economies. Pseudo-games are a generalization of games in which players' actions affect not only the payoffs of other players but also their feasible action spaces. Although the computation of GNE and CE is intractable in the worst-case, i.e., PPAD-hard, in practice, many applications only require solutions with high accuracy in expectation over a distribution of problem instances. We introduce Generative Adversarial Equilibrium Solvers (GAES): a family of generative adversarial neural networks that can learn GNE and CE from only a sample of problem instances. We provide computational and sample complexity bounds for Lipschitz-smooth function approximators in a large class of concave pseudo-games, and apply the framework to finding Nash equilibria in normal-form games, CE in Arrow-Debreu competitive economies, and GNE in an environmental economic model of the Kyoto mechanism.

Authors

Keywords

  • Game Theory
  • Amortized Optimization
  • Generalized Nash equilibrium
  • Economics

Context

Venue
International Conference on Learning Representations
Archive span
2013-2025
Indexed papers
10294
Paper id
314370149273959375