Authors
Nir Andelman, Michal Feldman, Yishay Mansour
Publication date
2009/3/1
Journal
Games and Economic Behavior
Volume
65
Issue
2
Pages
289-317
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
A strong equilibrium is a pure Nash equilibrium which is resilient to deviations by coalitions. We define the strong price of anarchy (SPoA) to be the ratio of the worst strong equilibrium to the social optimum. Differently from the Price of Anarchy (defined as the ratio of the worst Nash Equilibrium to the social optimum), it quantifies the loss incurred from the lack of a central designer in settings that allow for coordination. We study the SPoA in two settings, namely job scheduling and network creation. In the job scheduling game we show that for unrelated machines the SPoA can be bounded as a function of the number of machines and the size of the coalition. For the network creation game we show that the SPoA is at most 2. In both cases we show that a strong equilibrium always exists, except for a well defined subset of network creation games.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Andelman, M Feldman, Y Mansour - Games and Economic Behavior, 2009