Selfish Routing and the Price of Anarchy

Author(s):  
Tim Roughgarden
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riccardo Colini-Baldeschi ◽  
Roberto Cominetti ◽  
Panayotis Mertikopoulos ◽  
Marco Scarsini

2015 ◽  
Vol 32 (01) ◽  
pp. 1540003
Author(s):  
Xujin Chen ◽  
Xiaodong Hu ◽  
Weidong Ma

This paper concerns the asymmetric atomic selfish routing game for load balancing in ring networks. In the selfish routing, each player selects a path in the ring network to route one unit traffic between its source and destination nodes, aiming at a minimum maximum link load along its own path. The selfish path selections by individuals ignore the system objective of minimizing the maximum load over all network links. This selfish ring load (SRL) game arises in a wide variety of applications in decentralized network routing, where network performance is often measured by the price of anarchy (PoA), the worst-case ratio between the maximum link loads in an equilibrium routing and an optimal routing. It has been known that the PoA of SRL with respect to classical Nash Equilibrium (NE) cannot be upper bounded by any constant, showing large loss of efficiency at some NE outcome. In an effort to improve the network performance in the SRL game, we generalize the model to so-called SRL with collusion (SRLC) which allows coordination within any coalition of up to k selfish players on the condition that every player of the coalition benefits from the coordination. We prove that, for m-player game on n-node ring, the PoA of SRLC is n - 1 when k ≤ 2, drops to 2 when k = 3 and is at least 1 + 2/m for k ≥ 4. Our study shows that on one hand, the performance of ring networks, in terms of maximum load, benefits significantly from coordination of self-interested players within small-sized coalitions; on the other hand, the equilibrium routing in SRL might not reach global optimum even if any number of players can coordinate.


Algorithmica ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 619-640 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgos Christodoulou ◽  
Kurt Mehlhorn ◽  
Evangelia Pyrga

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zijun Wu ◽  
Rolf H. Möhring ◽  
Yanyan Chen ◽  
Dachuan Xu

The price of anarchy (PoA) is a standard measure for the inefficiency of selfish routing in the static Wardrop traffic model. Empirical studies and a recent analysis reveal a surprising property that the PoA tends to one when the total demand T gets large. These results are extended by a new framework for the limit analysis of the PoA in arbitrary nonatomic congestion games that apply to arbitrary growth patterns of T and all regularly varying cost functions. For routing games with Bureau of Public Road (BPR) cost functions, the convergence follows a power law determined by the degree of the BPR functions, and a related conjecture need not hold. These findings are confirmed by an empirical analysis of traffic in Beijing.


Author(s):  
Francisco Benita ◽  
Vittorio Bilò ◽  
Barnabé Monnot ◽  
Georgios Piliouras ◽  
Cosimo Vinci

2009 ◽  
Vol 19 (01) ◽  
pp. 141-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRYSSIS GEORGIOU ◽  
THEOPHANIS PAVLIDES ◽  
ANNA PHILIPPOU

We study the problem of selfish routing in the presence of incomplete network information. Our model consists of a number of users who wish to route their traffic on a network of m parallel links with the objective of minimizing their latency. However, in doing so, they face the challenge of lack of precise information on the capacity of the network links. This uncertainty is modeled via a set of probability distributions over all the possibilities, one for each user. The resulting model is an amalgamation of the KP-model of [14] and the congestion games with user-specific functions of [22]. We embark on a study of Nash equilibria and the price of anarchy in this new model. In particular, we propose polynomial-time algorithms (w.r.t. our model's parameters) for computing some special cases of pure Nash equilibria and we show that negative results of [22], for the non-existence of pure Nash equilibria in the case of three users, do not apply to our model. Consequently, we propose an interesting open problem, that of the existence of pure Nash equilibria in the general case of our model. Furthermore, we consider appropriate notions for the social cost and the price of anarchy and obtain upper bounds for the latter. With respect to fully mixed Nash equilibria, we show that when they exist, they are unique. Finally, we prove that the fully mixed Nash equilibrium is the worst equilibrium.


Author(s):  
Aleksandr Belov ◽  
Konstantinos Mattas ◽  
Michail Makridis ◽  
Monica Menendez ◽  
Biagio Ciuffo

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