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Mechanisms for a No-Regret Agent: Beyond the Common Prior

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  • Modibo Camara
  • Jason Hartline
  • Aleck Johnsen

Abstract

A rich class of mechanism design problems can be understood as incomplete-information games between a principal who commits to a policy and an agent who responds, with payoffs determined by an unknown state of the world. Traditionally, these models require strong and often-impractical assumptions about beliefs (a common prior over the state). In this paper, we dispense with the common prior. Instead, we consider a repeated interaction where both the principal and the agent may learn over time from the state history. We reformulate mechanism design as a reinforcement learning problem and develop mechanisms that attain natural benchmarks without any assumptions on the state-generating process. Our results make use of novel behavioral assumptions for the agent -- centered around counterfactual internal regret -- that capture the spirit of rationality without relying on beliefs.

Suggested Citation

  • Modibo Camara & Jason Hartline & Aleck Johnsen, 2020. "Mechanisms for a No-Regret Agent: Beyond the Common Prior," Papers 2009.05518, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2009.05518
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. You Zu & Krishnamurthy Iyer & Haifeng Xu, 2021. "Learning to Persuade on the Fly: Robustness Against Ignorance," Papers 2102.10156, arXiv.org.
    2. Siyu Chen & Jibang Wu & Yifan Wu & Zhuoran Yang, 2023. "Learning to Incentivize Information Acquisition: Proper Scoring Rules Meet Principal-Agent Model," Papers 2303.08613, arXiv.org, revised Aug 2023.
    3. In-Koo Cho & Jonathan Libgober, 2021. "Machine Learning for Strategic Inference," Papers 2101.09613, arXiv.org.

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