TY - GEN
T1 - Efficiency of sequential english auctions with dynamic arrivals
AU - Compte, Olivier
AU - Lavi, Ron
AU - Segev, Ella
PY - 2012/7/10
Y1 - 2012/7/10
N2 - We study a setting of online auctions with expiring/perishable items: K items are sold sequentially, buyers arrive over time and have unit-demand. The goal is to maximize the social welfare (sum of winners' values). Most previously suggested mechanisms for this model are direct-revelation. In contrast, in real-life we usually see open mechanisms, most often a sequence of English auctions. We ask whether the previous optimal approximation bounds can be achieved using the more popular/realistic mechanism, or a small variant of it. We observe that a sequence of English auctions (the exact original format) does not guarantee any constant approximation, and describe two variants that bring back the approximation guarantee. In the first variant, the price ascent is stopped when the number of active bidders is equal to the number of remaining items. The winner is chosen from this set of active bidders using some tie-breaking rule. This yields a truthful deterministic 2-approximation. Moreover we show that this ratio is the best possible for any deterministic mechanism that must charge payments at the time of the sale. If the winner is chosen uniformly at random from the set of active bidders, the approximation ratio decreases to e/e-1 ≃ 1.582 (the currently best approximation ratio for this problem). The second variant is to disqualify bidders that quit the auction when the number of active bidders is larger than the number of remaining items, i.e. to disallow their participation in future auctions. Under the assumption that the true arrival times are observed by the auctioneer (i.e. values are the only private information) this activity rule again ensures a 2-approximation of the social welfare when players play undominated strategies.
AB - We study a setting of online auctions with expiring/perishable items: K items are sold sequentially, buyers arrive over time and have unit-demand. The goal is to maximize the social welfare (sum of winners' values). Most previously suggested mechanisms for this model are direct-revelation. In contrast, in real-life we usually see open mechanisms, most often a sequence of English auctions. We ask whether the previous optimal approximation bounds can be achieved using the more popular/realistic mechanism, or a small variant of it. We observe that a sequence of English auctions (the exact original format) does not guarantee any constant approximation, and describe two variants that bring back the approximation guarantee. In the first variant, the price ascent is stopped when the number of active bidders is equal to the number of remaining items. The winner is chosen from this set of active bidders using some tie-breaking rule. This yields a truthful deterministic 2-approximation. Moreover we show that this ratio is the best possible for any deterministic mechanism that must charge payments at the time of the sale. If the winner is chosen uniformly at random from the set of active bidders, the approximation ratio decreases to e/e-1 ≃ 1.582 (the currently best approximation ratio for this problem). The second variant is to disqualify bidders that quit the auction when the number of active bidders is larger than the number of remaining items, i.e. to disallow their participation in future auctions. Under the assumption that the true arrival times are observed by the auctioneer (i.e. values are the only private information) this activity rule again ensures a 2-approximation of the social welfare when players play undominated strategies.
KW - dynamic mechanism design
KW - sequential auctions
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84863518401&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/2229012.2229041
DO - 10.1145/2229012.2229041
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84863518401
SN - 9781450314152
T3 - Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce
SP - 369
BT - EC '12 - Proceedings of the 13th ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce
T2 - 13th ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce, EC '12
Y2 - 4 June 2012 through 8 June 2012
ER -