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Learning and Computation of ΦΦ-Equilibria at the Frontier of Tractability

ACM Conference on Economics and Computation (EC), 2025
Main:22 Pages
1 Figures
Bibliography:5 Pages
1 Tables
Appendix:3 Pages
Abstract

Φ\Phi-equilibria -- and the associated notion of Φ\Phi-regret -- are a powerful and flexible framework at the heart of online learning and game theory, whereby enriching the set of deviations Φ\Phi begets stronger notions of rationality. Recently, Daskalakis, Farina, Fishelson, Pipis, and Schneider (STOC '24) -- abbreviated as DFFPS -- settled the existence of efficient algorithms when Φ\Phi contains only linear maps under a general, dd-dimensional convex constraint set X\mathcal{X}. In this paper, we significantly extend their work by resolving the case where Φ\Phi is kk-dimensional; degree-\ell polynomials constitute a canonical such example with k=dO()k = d^{O(\ell)}. In particular, positing only oracle access to X\mathcal{X}, we obtain two main positive results: i) a poly(n,d,k,log(1/ϵ))\text{poly}(n, d, k, \text{log}(1/\epsilon))-time algorithm for computing ϵ\epsilon-approximate Φ\Phi-equilibria in nn-player multilinear games, and ii) an efficient online algorithm that incurs average Φ\Phi-regret at most ϵ\epsilon using poly(d,k)/ϵ2\text{poly}(d, k)/\epsilon^2 rounds.We also show nearly matching lower bounds in the online learning setting, thereby obtaining for the first time a family of deviations that captures the learnability of Φ\Phi-regret.From a technical standpoint, we extend the framework of DFFPS from linear maps to the more challenging case of maps with polynomial dimension. At the heart of our approach is a polynomial-time algorithm for computing an expected fixed point of any ϕ:XX\phi : \mathcal{X} \to \mathcal{X} based on the ellipsoid against hope (EAH) algorithm of Papadimitriou and Roughgarden (JACM '08). In particular, our algorithm for computing Φ\Phi-equilibria is based on executing EAH in a nested fashion -- each step of EAH itself being implemented by invoking a separate call to EAH.

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