The price of defense
Date
2006Author
Mavronicolas, MariosMichael, Loizos
Lesta, Vicky Papadopoulou
Philippou, Anna
Spirakis, Paul G.
ISSN
0302-9743Source
31st International Symposium on Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science, MFCS 2006Volume
4162 LNCSPages
717-728Google Scholar check
Keyword(s):
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
We consider a strategic game with two classes of confronting randomized players on a graph G(V, E): v attackers, each choosing vertices and wishing to minimize the probability of being caught, and a defender, who chooses edges and gains the expected number of attackers it catches. The Price of Defense is the worst-case ratio, over all Nash equilibria, of the optimal gain of the defender over its gain at a Nash equilibrium. We provide a comprehensive collection of trade-offs between the Price of Defense and the computational efficiency of Nash equilibria. - Through reduction to a Two-Players, Constant-Sum Game, we prove that a Nash equilibrium can be computed in polynomial time. The reduction does not provide any apparent guarantees on the Price of Defense. - To obtain such, we analyze several structured Nash equilibria: In a Matching Nash equilibrium, the support of the defender is an Edge Cover. We prove that they can be computed in polynomial time, and they incur a Price of Defense of α(G), the Independence Number of G. In a Perfect Matching Nash equilibrium, the support of the defender is a Perfect Matching. We prove that they can be computed in polynomial time, and they incur a Price of Defense of |V|/2. In a Defender Uniform Nash equilibrium, the defender chooses uniformly each edge in its support. We prove that they incur a Price of Defense falling between those for Matching and Perfect Matching Nash Equilibria however, it is NP-complete to decide their existence. In an Attacker Symmetric and Uniform Nash equilibrium, all attackers have a common support on which each uses a uniform distribution. We prove that they can be computed in polynomial time and incur a Price of Defense of either |V|/2 or α(G). © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2006.