DocumentCode
180721
Title
A Counter-example to Karlin´s Strong Conjecture for Fictitious Play
Author
Daskalakis, Constantinos ; Qinxuan Pan
fYear
2014
fDate
18-21 Oct. 2014
Firstpage
11
Lastpage
20
Abstract
Fictitious play is a natural dynamic for equilibrium play in zero-sum games, proposed by Brown [6], and shown to converge by Robinson [33]. Samuel Karlin conjectured in 1959 that fictitious play converges at rate O(t-1/2) with respect to the number of steps t. We disprove this conjecture by showing that, when the payoff matrix of the row player is the n × n identity matrix, fictitious play may converge (for some tie-breaking) at rate as slow as Ω(t-1/n).
Keywords
game theory; matrix algebra; Karlin´s strong conjecture; equilibrium play; fictitious play; natural dynamic; payoff matrix; zero-sum games; Convergence; Games; Heuristic algorithms; Linear programming; Nash equilibrium; Vectors; Karlin´s conjecture; fictitious play; zero-sum games;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS), 2014 IEEE 55th Annual Symposium on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
ISSN
0272-5428
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FOCS.2014.10
Filename
6978985
Link To Document