Randomized Wagering Mechanisms

Authors

  • Yiling Chen Harvard University
  • Yang Liu University of California, Santa Cruz
  • Juntao Wang Harvard University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v33i01.33011845

Abstract

Wagering mechanisms are one-shot betting mechanisms that elicit agents’ predictions of an event. For deterministic wagering mechanisms, an existing impossibility result has shown incompatibility of some desirable theoretical properties. In particular, Pareto optimality (no profitable side bet before allocation) can not be achieved together with weak incentive compatibility, weak budget balance and individual rationality. In this paper, we expand the design space of wagering mechanisms to allow randomization and ask whether there are randomized wagering mechanisms that can achieve all previously considered desirable properties, including Pareto optimality. We answer this question positively with two classes of randomized wagering mechanisms: i) one simple randomized lottery-type implementation of existing deterministic wagering mechanisms, and ii) another family of randomized wagering mechanisms, named surrogate wagering mechanisms, which are robust to noisy ground truth. Surrogate wagering mechanisms are inspired by an idea of learning with noisy labels (Natarajan et al. 2013) as well as a recent extension of this idea to the information elicitation without verification setting (Liu and Chen 2018). We show that a broad set of randomized wagering mechanisms satisfy all desirable theoretical properties.

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Published

2019-07-17

How to Cite

Chen, Y., Liu, Y., & Wang, J. (2019). Randomized Wagering Mechanisms. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 33(01), 1845-1852. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v33i01.33011845

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Section

AAAI Technical Track: Game Theory and Economic Paradigms