a tribute to prof. lloyd stowell shapley and prof. alvin elliot roth

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A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth 2012 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences ”for the theory of stable allocations and the practice of market design” October 19, 2012

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Expository talk on the major contribution of Prof. L. S. Shapley.

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Page 1: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley andProf. Alvin Elliot Roth

2012 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences ”for the theory ofstable allocations and the practice of market design”

October 19, 2012

Page 2: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Overview

1 Contribution of ShapleyNon-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

2 Stable allocationProblem with examplesTheorem

L. Shapley

Page 3: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Overview

1 Contribution of ShapleyNon-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

2 Stable allocationProblem with examplesTheorem

L. Shapley

Page 4: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Necessity

Figure: John von Neumann

In their book The Theory ofGames and Economic Behavior(1944), von Neumann andMorgenstern asserted that themathematics developed forthe physical sciences, whichdescribes the workings of adisinterested nature, was apoor model for economics.

L. Shapley

Page 5: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Philosophy

Figure: Non-cooperative DynamicGame

Game theory does notattempt to state what aplayer’s goal should be,instead, it shows how a playercan best achieve his goal,whatever that goal is.

It is assumed that Players of agame are rational in theirchoices, and each assumesrationality of opponent, andhence can reconstructopponent’s rational moves.

L. Shapley

Page 6: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Philosophy

Figure: Non-cooperative DynamicGame

Game theory does notattempt to state what aplayer’s goal should be,instead, it shows how a playercan best achieve his goal,whatever that goal is.

It is assumed that Players of agame are rational in theirchoices, and each assumesrationality of opponent, andhence can reconstructopponent’s rational moves.

L. Shapley

Page 7: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Solution

Figure: Example: A Static Gamemax

qmin

pV (p, q) = min

pmax

qV (p, q)

= V (p∗, q∗),(p∗, q∗) = (0.1, 0.9)

Safe I contains Rs. 1 Crore

Safe II contains Rs. 9 Crore

Safes are in separate locations

Only one Guard to protect

Only one thief to steal

Guard protects according toimportance

Thief attempts, according toavailability

L. Shapley

Page 8: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Solution

Figure: Example: A Static Gamemax

qmin

pV (p, q) = min

pmax

qV (p, q)

= V (p∗, q∗),(p∗, q∗) = (0.1, 0.9)

Safe I contains Rs. 1 Crore

Safe II contains Rs. 9 Crore

Safes are in separate locations

Only one Guard to protect

Only one thief to steal

Guard protects according toimportance

Thief attempts, according toavailability

L. Shapley

Page 9: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Generalization

Figure: John Forbes Nash

Every finite, two-personconstant-sum static gamehas a saddle pointequilibrium in mixedstrategies [John vonNeumann 1928].

For every finite staticgame, there exists amixed-strategy NE [Nash1950].

A SE exists for a class oftwo-person constant-summulti-stage (stochastic)games [Shapley 1953].

L. Shapley

Page 10: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Generalization

Figure: John Forbes Nash

Every finite, two-personconstant-sum static gamehas a saddle pointequilibrium in mixedstrategies [John vonNeumann 1928].

For every finite staticgame, there exists amixed-strategy NE [Nash1950].

A SE exists for a class oftwo-person constant-summulti-stage (stochastic)games [Shapley 1953].

L. Shapley

Page 11: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Generalization

Figure: John Forbes Nash

Every finite, two-personconstant-sum static gamehas a saddle pointequilibrium in mixedstrategies [John vonNeumann 1928].

For every finite staticgame, there exists amixed-strategy NE [Nash1950].

A SE exists for a class oftwo-person constant-summulti-stage (stochastic)games [Shapley 1953].

L. Shapley

Page 12: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Non-cooperative GamesCo-operative Games

Some of the ground breaking works

Shapley value (1953)To each cooperative game, it assigns a unique distribution(among the players) of a total surplus generated by thecoalition of all players.

Shapley-Shubik power index (1954)It measures the powers of players in a voting game.

Bondareva-Shapley theorem (1960)It describes a necessary and sufficient condition for thenon-emptiness of the core of a cooperative game.

Gale-Shapley algorithm (1962)Existence of a stable allocation for marriage problem.

L. Shapley

Page 13: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Problem with examplesTheorem

Stable allocation

Figure: Diagram of preferences

Consider a community of n menand n women. Each personranks those of the opposite sexin accordance with his or herpreferences for a marriagepartner. Is there a satisfactoryway of marrying off all membersof the community?Definition: A set of marriagesis called unstable if under itthere are a man and a womanwho are not married to eachother but prefer each other totheir actual mates.

L. Shapley

Page 14: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Problem with examplesTheorem

Stable allocation

A B C

α 1,3 2,2 3,1β 3,1 1,3 2,2γ 2,2 3,1 1,3

Table: Ranking matrix for threemen and three women

Stable sets(α,A), (β,B) and (γ,C )(α,C ), (β,A) and (γ,B)(α,B), (β,C ) and (γ,A)All other arrangements areunstable.

Figure: Ranking matrix for fourmen and four women

One can check, there is only onestable set of marriages for thisexample.

L. Shapley

Page 15: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Problem with examplesTheorem

Stable allocation

Figure: L. Shapley

THEOREM [GALE &SHAPLEY (1962)]:For any finite marriage problem,there always exists a stable setof marriages.

Born June 2, 1923 (age 89)Cambridge, Massachusetts

Nationality AmericanAffiliation University of California,

Los Angeles (since 1981)Fields Mathematics, Economics

L. Shapley

Page 16: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Contribution of ShapleyStable allocation

Problem with examplesTheorem

Concluding Remark

L. Shapley

Page 17: A Tribute to Prof. Lloyd Stowell Shapley and Prof. Alvin Elliot Roth

Thank You