It's Not All Black and White: Degree of Truthfulness for Risk-Avoiding Agents

Eden Hartman, Erel Segal-Halevi, Biaoshuai Tao

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

The classic notion of truthfulness requires that no agent has a profitable manipulation - an untruthful report that, for some combination of reports of the other agents, increases her utility. This strong notion implicitly assumes that the manipulating agent either knows what all other agents are going to report, or is willing to take the risk and act as-if she knows their reports.Without knowledge of the others' reports, most manipulations are risky - they might decrease the manipulator's utility for some other combinations of reports by the other agents. Accordingly, a recent paper (Bu, Song and Tao, "On the existence of truthful fair cake cutting mechanisms", Artificial Intelligence 319 (2023), 103904) suggests a relaxed notion, which we refer to as risk-avoiding truthfulness (RAT), which requires only that no agent can gain from a safe manipulation - one that is sometimes beneficial and never harmful.Truthfulness and RAT are two extremes: the former considers manipulators with complete knowledge of others, whereas the latter considers manipulators with no knowledge at all. In reality, agents often know about some - but not all - of the other agents. This paper introduces the RAT-degree of a mechanism, defined as the smallest number of agents whose reports, if known, may allow another agent to safely manipulate, or n if there is no such number. This notion interpolates between classic truthfulness (degree n) and RAT (degree at least 1): a mechanism with a higher RAT-degree is harder to manipulate safely.To illustrate the generality and applicability of this concept, we analyze the RAT-degree of prominent mechanisms across various social choice settings, including auctions, indivisible goods allocations, cake-cutting, voting, and two-sided matching.Extended Version:1 https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.18805.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationEC 2025 - Proceedings of the 26th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery, Inc
Pages996-1016
Number of pages21
ISBN (Electronic)9798400719431
DOIs
StatePublished - 2 Jul 2025
Externally publishedYes
Event26th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation, EC 2025 - Stanford, United States
Duration: 7 Jul 202510 Jul 2025

Publication series

NameEC 2025 - Proceedings of the 26th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation

Conference

Conference26th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation, EC 2025
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityStanford
Period7/07/2510/07/25

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Copyright held by the owner/author(s).

Keywords

  • auctions
  • cake-cutting
  • indivisible goods allocations
  • mechanism design
  • risk-avoiding
  • two-sided matching
  • voting

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'It's Not All Black and White: Degree of Truthfulness for Risk-Avoiding Agents'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this