- Series
- ACO Student Seminar
- Time
- Friday, April 20, 2018 - 1:05pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Kira Goldner – CSE, University of Washington – kgoldner@cs.washington.edu – https://homes.cs.washington.edu/~kgoldner/
- Organizer
- He Guo
Consider the problem of selling items to a unit-demand buyer. Most work
on maximizing seller revenue considers either a setting that is single
dimensional, such as where the items are identical, or
multi-dimensional, where the items are heterogeneous. With respect to
revenue-optimal mechanisms, these settings sit at extreme ends of a
spectrum: from simple and fully characterized (single-dimensional) to
complex and nebulous (multi-dimensional).
In this paper, we identify a setting that sits in between these
extremes. We consider a seller who has three services {A,B,C} for sale
to a single buyer with a value v and an interest G from {A,B,C}, and
there is a known partial ordering over the services. For example,
suppose the seller is selling {internet}, {internet, phone}, and
{internet, cable tv}. A buyer with interest {internet} would be
satisfied by receiving phone or cable tv in addition, but a customer
whose interest is {internet, phone} cannot be satisfied by any other
option. Thus this corresponds to a partial-ordering where {internet}
> {internet, phone} and {internet} > {internet, cable tv}, but
{internet, phone} and {internet, cable tv} are not comparable.
We show formally that partially-ordered items lie in a space of their
own, in between identical and heterogeneous items: there exist
distributions over (value, interest) pairs for three partially-ordered
items such that the menu complexity of the optimal mechanism is
unbounded, yet for all distributions there exists an optimal mechanism
of finite menu complexity. So this setting is vastly more complex than
identical items (where the menu complexity is one), or even
“totally-ordered” items as in the FedEx Problem [FGKK16] (where the menu
complexity is at most seven, for three items), yet drastically more
structured than heterogeneous items (where the menu complexity can be
uncountable [DDT15]). We achieve this result by proving a
characterization of the class of best duals and by giving a primal
recovery algorithm which obtains the optimal mechanism. In addition, we
(1) extend our lower-bound to the Multi-Unit Pricing setting, (2) give a
tighter and deterministic characterization of the optimal mechanism
when the buyer’s distribution satisfies the declining marginal revenue
condition, and (3) prove a master theorem that allows us to reason about
duals instead of distributions.
Joint work with Nikhil Devanur, Raghuvansh Saxena, Ariel Schvartzman, and Matt Weinberg.