what game are we playing: Difference between revisions
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
Recently, there have been | Recently, there have been intensive studies of methods using AI to search for the optimal solution of large-scale, zero-sum and extensive form problems. However, most of these works operate under the assumption that the parameters of the game are known, while this scenario is ideal. In real-world problems, most of the parameters are unknown prior to the game. This paper proposes a framework to find an optimal solution using a primal-dual Newton Method and then using back-propagation to analytically compute the gradients of all the relevant game parameters. | ||
The approach to solving this problem is to consider ''quantal response equilibrium'' (QRE), which is a generalization of Nash equilibrium (NE) where the agents can make suboptimal decisions. It is shown that the solution to the QRE is a differentiable function of the payoff matrix. Consequently, back-propagation can be used to analytically solve for the payoff matrix (or other game parameters). This strategy has many future application areas as it allows for game-solving (both extensive and normal form) to be integrated as a module in a deep neural network. | The approach to solving this problem is to consider ''quantal response equilibrium'' (QRE), which is a generalization of Nash equilibrium (NE) where the agents can make suboptimal decisions. It is shown that the solution to the QRE is a differentiable function of the payoff matrix. Consequently, back-propagation can be used to analytically solve for the payoff matrix (or other game parameters). This strategy has many future application areas as it allows for game-solving (both extensive and normal form) to be integrated as a module in a deep neural network. | ||
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=== Zero-Sum Normal Form Games === | === Zero-Sum Normal Form Games === | ||
A normal form game is defined as a game with a finite number of players, <math>N</math>, where each player has a non-empty and finite action space, <math>A_i</math>. The outcome of the game is defined by the action profile <math>a = (a_1,...,a_n)</math>, where <math>a_i</math> is the action taken by the <math>i^{th}</math> player. In addition, each player has an associated utility function that is given by <math>u_i: A_1\times...\times A_n \rightarrow\mathbb{R}</math>. An example of a normal form game is the prisoner's dilemma. Zero-sum games refer to a game in which one player gains at the detriment of the other player. Mathematically, <math>\forall a\in A_1\times A_2, u_2(a) + u_2(a) = 0</math> (Larson, "Game-theoretic methods for computer science Normal Form Games"). | |||
In two-player zero-sum games there is a '''payoff matrix''' <math>P</math> that describes the rewards for two players employing specific strategies u and v respectively. The optimal strategy mixture may be found with a classic min-max formulation: | In two-player zero-sum games there is a '''payoff matrix''' <math>P</math> that describes the rewards for two players employing specific strategies u and v respectively. The optimal strategy mixture may be found with a classic min-max formulation: | ||
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The normal form representation for games where players have many choices quickly becomes intractable. For example, consider a chess game: One the first turn, player 1 has 20 possible moves and then player 2 has 20 possible responses. If in the following number of turns each player is estimated to have ~30 possible moves and if a typical game is 40 moves per player, the total number of strategies is roughly <math>10^{120} </math> per player (this is known as the Shannon number for game-tree complexity of chess) and so the payoff matrix for a typical game of chess must therefore have <math> O(10^{240}) </math> entries. | The normal form representation for games where players have many choices quickly becomes intractable. For example, consider a chess game: One the first turn, player 1 has 20 possible moves and then player 2 has 20 possible responses. If in the following number of turns each player is estimated to have ~30 possible moves and if a typical game is 40 moves per player, the total number of strategies is roughly <math>10^{120} </math> per player (this is known as the Shannon number for game-tree complexity of chess) and so the payoff matrix for a typical game of chess must therefore have <math> O(10^{240}) </math> entries. | ||
Instead, it is much more useful to represent the game graphically as an "'''Extensive form game'''" (EFG). We'll also need to consider types of games where there is '''imperfect information''' - players do not necessarily have access to the full state of the game. An example of this is one-card poker: (1) Each player draws a single card from a 13-card deck (ignore suits) (2) Player 1 decides whether to bet/hold (3) Player 2 decides whether to call/raise (4) Player 1 must either call/fold if Player 2 raised. From this description, player 1 has <math> 2^{13} </math> possible first moves (all combinations of (card, raise/hold)) and has <math> 2^{13} </math> possible second moves (whenever player 1 gets a second move) for a total of <math> 2^{26} </math> possible strategies. In addition, Player 1 never knows what cards player 2 has and vice versa. So instead of representing the game with a huge payoff matrix, we can instead represent it as a simple decision tree (for a ''single'' drawn card of player 1): | Instead, it is much more useful to represent the game graphically as an "''' Extensive form game'''" (EFG). We'll also need to consider types of games where there is '''imperfect information''' - players do not necessarily have access to the full state of the game. An example of this is one-card poker: (1) Each player draws a single card from a 13-card deck (ignore suits) (2) Player 1 decides whether to bet/hold (3) Player 2 decides whether to call/raise (4) Player 1 must either call/fold if Player 2 raised. From this description, player 1 has <math> 2^{13} </math> possible first moves (all combinations of (card, raise/hold)) and has <math> 2^{13} </math> possible second moves (whenever player 1 gets a second move) for a total of <math> 2^{26} </math> possible strategies. In addition, Player 1 never knows what cards player 2 has and vice versa. So instead of representing the game with a huge payoff matrix, we can instead represent it as a simple decision tree (for a ''single'' drawn the card of player 1): | ||
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== Critiques == | == Critiques == | ||
The proposed method appears to suffer from two flaws. Firstly, the assumption that players behave in accordance with the QRE severely limits the space of player strategies and is known to exhibit pathological behavior even in one-player settings. Second, the solvers are computationally inefficient and are unable to scale. For this setting, they used Newton's method and it is found that the second-order algorithms do not scale to large games as with Nash equilibrium [4]. | The proposed method appears to suffer from two flaws. Firstly, the assumption that players behave in accordance with the QRE severely limits the space of player strategies and is known to exhibit pathological behavior even in one-player settings. Second, the solvers are computationally inefficient and are unable to scale. For this setting, they used Newton's method and it is found that the second-order algorithms do not scale to large games as with Nash equilibrium [4]. | ||
In the one-card poker section, it might be better to write "Next, they investigated extensive form games ... It may even be a function of contextual features such as the demographics of players. ... 5 runs of training, with the same weights but different training sets." | |||
Zero-Sum Normal Form Games usually follow Gaussian distributions with two non-empty sets of strategies of player one and player two correspondingly, and also a payoff function defined on the set of possible realizations. | |||
This method of proposing that real players will follow a laid out scheme or playing strategy is almost always a drastic oversimplification of real-world scenarios and severely limits the applications. In order to better fit a model to the real players, there almost always has to be some sort of stochastic implementation which accounts for the presence of irrational users in the system. | This method of proposing that real players will follow a laid out scheme or playing strategy is almost always a drastic oversimplification of real-world scenarios and severely limits the applications. In order to better fit a model to the real players, there almost always has to be some sort of stochastic implementation which accounts for the presence of irrational users in the system. | ||
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The theory assumes rational players, which means that roughly speaking, the players make decisions based on increasing their respective payoffs (utility values, preferences,..). However, in real-life scenarios, this might not hold true. Thus, it would be a good idea to include considerations regarding this issue in this summary. Another area that is worth exploring is the need for things like “bluffing” in games with hidden information. It would be interesting to see whether the results generated in this paper are in support of "bluffing" or not. | The theory assumes rational players, which means that roughly speaking, the players make decisions based on increasing their respective payoffs (utility values, preferences,..). However, in real-life scenarios, this might not hold true. Thus, it would be a good idea to include considerations regarding this issue in this summary. Another area that is worth exploring is the need for things like “bluffing” in games with hidden information. It would be interesting to see whether the results generated in this paper are in support of "bluffing" or not. | ||
It is good that the authors of this paper provided analysis on different types of games, but it would be great if they could also provide some future insights on this method such as whether it can be applied to more complex games such as blackjack poker / it would work or not. | |||
The authors evaluated the performance by plotting the mean squared error (MSE) of the training data. Prediction error on testing data can also be provided to better evaluate the prediction power. | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
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[4] Farina, G., Kroer, C., & Sandholm, T. (2019). Online Convex Optimization for Sequential Decision Processes and Extensive-Form Games. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 33(01), 1917-1925. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v33i01.33011917 | [4] Farina, G., Kroer, C., & Sandholm, T. (2019). Online Convex Optimization for Sequential Decision Processes and Extensive-Form Games. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 33(01), 1917-1925. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v33i01.33011917 | ||
[5] Larson, K. Game-theoretic methods for computer science Normal Form Games. Lecture presented at CS 886 in University of Waterloo, Waterloo. Retrieved from https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwiL24iwprrtAhWJFFkFHU52D0MQFjAQegQIIhAC&url=https://cs.uwaterloo.ca/~klarson/teaching/F06-886/slides/normalform.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0j9fw9oRkUGZOsY8ZCyv6i |
Latest revision as of 22:55, 6 December 2020
Authors
Yuxin Wang, Evan Peters, Yifan Mou, Sangeeth Kalaichanthiran
Introduction
Recently, there have been intensive studies of methods using AI to search for the optimal solution of large-scale, zero-sum and extensive form problems. However, most of these works operate under the assumption that the parameters of the game are known, while this scenario is ideal. In real-world problems, most of the parameters are unknown prior to the game. This paper proposes a framework to find an optimal solution using a primal-dual Newton Method and then using back-propagation to analytically compute the gradients of all the relevant game parameters.
The approach to solving this problem is to consider quantal response equilibrium (QRE), which is a generalization of Nash equilibrium (NE) where the agents can make suboptimal decisions. It is shown that the solution to the QRE is a differentiable function of the payoff matrix. Consequently, back-propagation can be used to analytically solve for the payoff matrix (or other game parameters). This strategy has many future application areas as it allows for game-solving (both extensive and normal form) to be integrated as a module in a deep neural network.
An example of architecture is presented below:
Payoff matrix [math]\displaystyle{ P }[/math] is parameterized by a domain-dependent low dimensional vector [math]\displaystyle{ \phi }[/math], where [math]\displaystyle{ \phi }[/math] depends on a differentiable function [math]\displaystyle{ M_1(x) }[/math]. Furthermore, [math]\displaystyle{ P }[/math] is applied to QRE to get the equilibrium strategies [math]\displaystyle{ (u^∗, v^∗) }[/math]. Lastly, the loss function is calculated after applying any differentiable [math]\displaystyle{ M_2(u^∗, v^∗) }[/math].
The effectiveness of this model is demonstrated using the games “Rock, Paper, Scissors”, one-card poker, and a security defense game. This could represent a substantial step forward in understanding how game-theoretic methods can be applied to uncertain settings by the ability to learn solely from observed actions and the relevant parameters.
Learning and Quantal Response in Normal Form Games
The game-solving module provides all elements required in differentiable learning, which maps contextual features to payoff matrices, and computes equilibrium strategies under a set of contextual features. This paper will learn zero-sum games and start with normal form games since they have game solver and learning approach capturing much of intuition and basic methodology.
Zero-Sum Normal Form Games
A normal form game is defined as a game with a finite number of players, [math]\displaystyle{ N }[/math], where each player has a non-empty and finite action space, [math]\displaystyle{ A_i }[/math]. The outcome of the game is defined by the action profile [math]\displaystyle{ a = (a_1,...,a_n) }[/math], where [math]\displaystyle{ a_i }[/math] is the action taken by the [math]\displaystyle{ i^{th} }[/math] player. In addition, each player has an associated utility function that is given by [math]\displaystyle{ u_i: A_1\times...\times A_n \rightarrow\mathbb{R} }[/math]. An example of a normal form game is the prisoner's dilemma. Zero-sum games refer to a game in which one player gains at the detriment of the other player. Mathematically, [math]\displaystyle{ \forall a\in A_1\times A_2, u_2(a) + u_2(a) = 0 }[/math] (Larson, "Game-theoretic methods for computer science Normal Form Games").
In two-player zero-sum games there is a payoff matrix [math]\displaystyle{ P }[/math] that describes the rewards for two players employing specific strategies u and v respectively. The optimal strategy mixture may be found with a classic min-max formulation: $$\min_u \max_v \ u^T P v \\ subject \ to \ 1^T u =1, u \ge 0 \\ 1^T v =1, v \ge 0. \ $$
Here, we consider the case where [math]\displaystyle{ P }[/math] is not known a priori. [math]\displaystyle{ P }[/math] could be a single fixed but unknown payoff matrix, or depend on some external context [math]\displaystyle{ x }[/math]. The solution [math]\displaystyle{ (u^*, v_0) }[/math] to this optimization and the solution [math]\displaystyle{ (u_0,v^*) }[/math] to the corresponding problem with inverse player order form the Nash equilibrium [math]\displaystyle{ (u^*,v^*) }[/math]. At this equilibrium, the players do not have anything to gain by changing their strategy, so this point is a stable state of the system. When the payoff matrix P is not known, we observe samples of actions [math]\displaystyle{ a^{(i)}, i =1,...,N }[/math] from one or both players, which depends on some external content [math]\displaystyle{ x }[/math], sampled from the equilibrium strategies [math]\displaystyle{ (u^*,v^*) }[/math], to recover the true underlying payoff matrix P or a function form P(x) depending on the current context.
Quantal Response Equilibria
However, NE is poorly suited because NEs are overly strict, discontinuous with respect to P, and may not be unique. To address these issues, model the players' actions with the quantal response equilibria (QRE), where noise is added to the payoff matric. Specifically, consider the logit equilibrium for zero-sum games that obeys the fixed point: $$ u^* _i = \frac {exp(-Pv)_i}{\sum_{q \in [n]} exp (-Pv)_q}, \ v^* _j= \frac {exp(P^T u)_j}{\sum_{q \in [m]} exp (P^T u)_q} .\qquad \ (1) $$ For a fixed opponent strategy, the logit equilibrium corresponding to a strategy is strictly convex, and thus the regularized best response is unique.
End-to-End Learning
Then to integrate a zero-sum solver, [1] introduced a method to solve the QRE and to differentiate through its solution.
QRE solver: To find the fixed point in (1), it is equivalent to solve the regularized min-max game: $$ \min_{u \in \mathbb{R}^n} \max_{v \in \mathbb{R}^m} \ u^T P v -H(v) + H(u) \\ \text{subject to } 1^T u =1, \ 1^T v =1, $$ where H(y) is the Gibbs entropy [math]\displaystyle{ \sum_i y_i log y_i }[/math]. Entropy regularization guarantees the non-negative condition and makes the equilibrium continuous with respect to P, which means players are encouraged to play more randomly, and all actions have a non-zero probability. Moreover, this problem has a unique saddle point corresponding to [math]\displaystyle{ (u^*, v^*) }[/math].
Using a primal-dual Newton Method to solve the QRE for two-player zero-sum games, the KKT conditions for the problem are: $$ Pv + \log(u) + 1 +\mu 1 = 0 \\ P^T v -\log(v) -1 +\nu 1 = 0 \\ 1^T u = 1, \ 1^T v = 1, $$ where [math]\displaystyle{ (\mu, \nu) }[/math] are Lagrange multipliers for the equality constraints on u, v respectively. Then applying Newton's method gives the the update rule: $$ Q \begin{bmatrix} \Delta u \\ \Delta v \\ \Delta \mu \\ \Delta \nu \\ \end{bmatrix} = - \begin{bmatrix} P v + \log u + 1 + \mu 1 \\ P^T u - \log v - 1 + \nu 1 \\ 1^T u - 1 \\ 1^T v - 1 \\ \end{bmatrix}, \qquad (2) $$ where Q is the Hessian of the Lagrangian, given by $$ Q = \begin{bmatrix} diag(\frac{1}{u}) & P & 1 & 0 \\ P^T & -diag(\frac{1}{v}) & 0 & 1\\ 1^T & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 1^T & 0 & 0 \\ \end{bmatrix}. $$
Differentiating Through QRE Solutions: The QRE solver provides a method to compute the necessary Jacobian-vector products. Specifically, we compute the gradient of the loss given the solution [math]\displaystyle{ (u^*,v^*) }[/math] to the QRE, and some loss function [math]\displaystyle{ L(u^*,v^*) }[/math]:
1. Take differentials of the KKT conditions: [math]\displaystyle{ Q \begin{bmatrix} du & dv & d\mu & d\nu \\ \end{bmatrix} ^T = \begin{bmatrix} -dPv & -dP^Tu & 0 & 0 \\ \end{bmatrix}^T. \ }[/math]
2. For small changes du, dv, [math]\displaystyle{ dL = \begin{bmatrix} v^TdP^T & u^TdP & 0 & 0 \\ \end{bmatrix} Q^{-1} \begin{bmatrix} -\nabla_u L & -\nabla_v L & 0 & 0 \\ \end{bmatrix}^T. }[/math]
3. Apply this to P, and take limits as dP is small: [math]\displaystyle{ \nabla_P L = y_u v^T + u y_v^T, \qquad (3) }[/math] where [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{bmatrix} y_u & y_v & y_{\mu} & y_{\nu}\\ \end{bmatrix}=Q^{-1}\begin{bmatrix} -\nabla_u L & -\nabla_v L & 0 & 0 \\ \end{bmatrix}^T. }[/math]
Hence, the forward pass is given by using the expression in (2) to solve for the logit equilibrium given P, and the backward pass is given by using [math]\displaystyle{ \nabla_u L }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \nabla_v L }[/math] to obtain [math]\displaystyle{ \nabla_P L }[/math] using (3). There does not always exist a unique P which generates [math]\displaystyle{ u^*, v^* }[/math] under the logit QRE, and we cannot expect to recover P when under-constrained.
Learning Extensive form games
The normal form representation for games where players have many choices quickly becomes intractable. For example, consider a chess game: One the first turn, player 1 has 20 possible moves and then player 2 has 20 possible responses. If in the following number of turns each player is estimated to have ~30 possible moves and if a typical game is 40 moves per player, the total number of strategies is roughly [math]\displaystyle{ 10^{120} }[/math] per player (this is known as the Shannon number for game-tree complexity of chess) and so the payoff matrix for a typical game of chess must therefore have [math]\displaystyle{ O(10^{240}) }[/math] entries.
Instead, it is much more useful to represent the game graphically as an " Extensive form game" (EFG). We'll also need to consider types of games where there is imperfect information - players do not necessarily have access to the full state of the game. An example of this is one-card poker: (1) Each player draws a single card from a 13-card deck (ignore suits) (2) Player 1 decides whether to bet/hold (3) Player 2 decides whether to call/raise (4) Player 1 must either call/fold if Player 2 raised. From this description, player 1 has [math]\displaystyle{ 2^{13} }[/math] possible first moves (all combinations of (card, raise/hold)) and has [math]\displaystyle{ 2^{13} }[/math] possible second moves (whenever player 1 gets a second move) for a total of [math]\displaystyle{ 2^{26} }[/math] possible strategies. In addition, Player 1 never knows what cards player 2 has and vice versa. So instead of representing the game with a huge payoff matrix, we can instead represent it as a simple decision tree (for a single drawn the card of player 1):
where player 1 is represented by "1", a node that has two branches corresponding to the allowed moves of player 1. However there must also be a notion of information available to either player: While this tree might correspond to say, player 1 holding a "9", it contains no information on what card player 2 is holding (and is much simpler because of this). This leads to the definition of an information set: the set of all nodes belonging to a single player for which the other player cannot distinguish which node has been reached. The information set may therefore be treated as a node itself, for which actions stemming from the node must be chosen in ignorance of what the other player did immediately before arriving at the node. In the poker example, the full game tree consists of a much more complex version of the tree shown above (containing repetitions of the given tree for every possible combination of cards dealt) and the and an example of the information set for player 1 is the set of all of the nodes owned by player 2 that immediately follow player 1's decision to hold. In other words, if player 1 holds there are 13 possible nodes describing the responses of player 2 (raise/hold for player 2 having card = ace, 1, ... King), and all 13 of these nodes are indistinguishable to player 1, and so form the information set for player 1.
The following is a review of important concepts for extensive form games first formalized in [2]. Let [math]\displaystyle{ \mathcal{I}_i }[/math] be the set of all information sets for player i, and for each [math]\displaystyle{ t \in \mathcal{I}_i }[/math] let [math]\displaystyle{ \sigma_t }[/math] be the actions taken by player i to arrive at [math]\displaystyle{ t }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ C_t }[/math] be the actions that player i can take from [math]\displaystyle{ u }[/math]. Then the set of all possible sequences that can be taken by player i is given by
$$ S_i = \{\emptyset \} \cup \{ \sigma_t c | u\in \mathcal{I}_i, c \in C_t \} $$
So for the one-card poker we would have [math]\displaystyle{ S_1 = \{\emptyset, \text{raise}, \text{hold}, \text{hold-call}, \text{hold-fold\} } }[/math]. From the possible sequences follows two important concepts:
- The EFG payoff matrix [math]\displaystyle{ P }[/math] of size [math]\displaystyle{ |S_1| \times |S_2| }[/math] (this is all possible actions available to either player), is populated with rewards from each leaf of the tree (or "zero" for each [math]\displaystyle{ (s_1, s_2) }[/math] that is an invalid pair), and the expected payoff for realization plans [math]\displaystyle{ (u, v) }[/math] is given by [math]\displaystyle{ u^T P v }[/math]
- A realization plan [math]\displaystyle{ u \in \mathbb{R}^{|S_1|} }[/math] for player 1 ([math]\displaystyle{ v \in \mathbb{R}^{|S_2|} }[/math] for player 2 ) will describe probabilities for players to carry out each possible sequence, and each realization plan must be constrained by (i) compatibility of sequences (e.g. "raise" is not compatible with "hold-call") and (ii) information sets available to the player. These constraints are linear: $$ Eu = e \\ Fv = f $$ where [math]\displaystyle{ e = f = (1, 0, ..., 0)^T }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ E, F }[/math] contain entries in [math]\displaystyle{ {-1, 0, 1} }[/math] describing compatibility and information sets.
The paper's main contribution is to develop a minimax problem for extensive form games:
$$
\min_u \max_v u^T P v + \sum_{t\in \mathcal{I}_1} \sum_{c \in C_t} u_c \log \frac{u_c}{u_{p_t}} - \sum_{t\in \mathcal{I}_2} \sum_{c \in C_t} v_c \log \frac{v_c}{v_{p_t}}
$$
where [math]\displaystyle{ p_t }[/math] is the action immediately preceding information set [math]\displaystyle{ t }[/math]. Intuitively, each sum resembles a cross-entropy over the distribution of probabilities in the realization plan comparing each probability to proceed from the information set to the probability to arrive at that information set. Importantly, these entropies are strictly convex or concave (for player 1 and player 2 respectively) [3] so that the min-max problem will have a unique solution and the objective function is continuous and continuously differentiable - this means there is a way to optimize the function. As noted in Theorem 1 of [1], the solution to this problem is equivalently a solution for the QRE of the game in reduced normal form.
Minimax can also be seen from an algorithmic perspective. Referring to the above figure containing a tree, it contains a sequence of states and action which alternates between two or more competing players. The above formulation of the min-max problem essentially measures how well a decision rule is from the perspective of a single player. To describe it in terms of the tree, if it is player 1's turn, then it is a mutual recursion of player 1 choosing to maximize its payoff and player 2 choosing to minimize player 1's payoff.
Having decided on a cost function, the method of Lagrange multipliers may be used to construct the Lagrangian that encodes the known constraints ([math]\displaystyle{ Eu = e \,, Fv = f }[/math], and [math]\displaystyle{ u, v \geq 0 }[/math]), and then optimize the Lagrangian using Newton's method (identically to the previous section). Accounting for the constraints, the Lagrangian becomes
$$
\mathcal{L} = g(u, v) + \sum_i \mu_i(Eu - e)_i + \sum_i \nu_i (Fv - f)_i
$$
where [math]\displaystyle{ g }[/math] is the argument from the minimax statement above and [math]\displaystyle{ u, v \geq 0 }[/math] become KKT conditions. The general update rule for Newton's method may be written in terms of the derivatives of [math]\displaystyle{ \mathcal{L} }[/math] with respect to primal variables [math]\displaystyle{ u, v }[/math] and dual variables [math]\displaystyle{ \mu, \nu }[/math], yielding:
$$ \nabla_{u,v,\mu,\nu}^2 \mathcal{L} \cdot (\Delta u, \Delta v, \Delta \mu, \Delta \nu)^T= - \nabla_{u,v,\mu,\nu} \mathcal{L} $$ where [math]\displaystyle{ \nabla_{u,v,\mu,\nu}^2 \mathcal{L} }[/math] is the Hessian of the Lagrangian and [math]\displaystyle{ \nabla_{u,v,\mu,\nu} \mathcal{L} }[/math] is simply a column vector of the KKT stationarity conditions. Combined with the previous section, this completes the goal of the paper: To construct a differentiable problem for learning normal form and extensive form games.
Experiments
The authors demonstrated learning on extensive form games in the presence of side information, with partial observations using three experiments. In all cases, the goal was to maximize the likelihood of realizing an observed sequence from the player, assuming they act in accordance with the QRE. The authors found that the best way to implement the module was to use a medium to large batch size, RMSProp, or Adam optimizers with a learning rate between [math]\displaystyle{ \left[0.0001,0.01\right]. }[/math]
Rock, Paper, Scissors
Rock, Paper, Scissors is a 2-player zero-sum game. For this game, the best strategy to reach a Nash equilibrium and a Quantal response equilibrium is to uniformly play each hand with equal odds. The first experiment was to learn a non-symmetric variant of Rock, Paper, Scissors with incomplete information with the following payoff matrix:
Rock | Paper | Scissors | |
---|---|---|---|
Rock | 0 | [math]\displaystyle{ -b_1 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ b_2 }[/math] |
Paper | [math]\displaystyle{ b_1 }[/math] | 0 | [math]\displaystyle{ -b_3 }[/math] |
Scissors | [math]\displaystyle{ -b_2 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ b_3 }[/math] | 0 |
where each of the [math]\displaystyle{ b }[/math] ’s are linear function of some features [math]\displaystyle{ x \in \mathbb{R}^{2} }[/math] (i.e., [math]\displaystyle{ b_y = x^Tw_y }[/math], [math]\displaystyle{ y \in }[/math] {[math]\displaystyle{ 1,2,3 }[/math]} , where [math]\displaystyle{ w_y }[/math] are to be learned by the algorithm). Using many trials of random rewards the technique produced the following results for optimal strategies[1]:
From the graphs above, we can tell the following: 1) both parameters learned and predicted strategies improve with a larger dataset; 2) with a reasonably sized dataset, >1000 here, convergence is stable and is fairly quick.
One-Card Poker
Next they investigated extensive form games using the one-Card Poker (with imperfect information) introduced in the previous section. In the experimental setup, they used a deck stacked non-uniformly (meaning repeat cards were allowed). Their goal was to learn this distribution of cards from observations of many rounds of the play. Different from the distribution of cards dealt, the method built in the paper is more suited to learn the player’s perceived or believed distribution of cards. It may even be a function of contextual features such as demographics of players. Three experiments were run with [math]\displaystyle{ n=4 }[/math]. Each experiment comprised 5 runs of training, with same weights but different training sets. Let [math]\displaystyle{ d \in \mathbb{R}^{n}, d \ge 0, \sum_{i} d_i = 1 }[/math] be the weights of the cards. The probability that the players are dealt cards [math]\displaystyle{ (i,j) }[/math] is [math]\displaystyle{ \frac{d_i d_j}{1-d_i} }[/math]. This distribution is asymmetric between players. Matrix [math]\displaystyle{ P, E, F }[/math] for the case [math]\displaystyle{ n=4 }[/math] are presented in [1]. With training for 2500 epochs, the mean squared error of learned parameters (card weights, [math]\displaystyle{ u, v }[/math] ) are averaged over all runs of and are presented as following [1]:
Security Resource Allocation Game
From Security Resource Allocation Game, they demonstrated the ability to learn from imperfect observations. The defender possesses [math]\displaystyle{ k }[/math] indistinguishable and indivisible defensive resources which he splits among [math]\displaystyle{ n }[/math] targets, { [math]\displaystyle{ T_1, ……, T_n }[/math]}. The attacker chooses one target. If the attack succeeds, the attacker gets [math]\displaystyle{ R_i }[/math] reward and defender gets [math]\displaystyle{ -R_i }[/math], otherwise zero payoff for both. If there are n defenders guarding [math]\displaystyle{ T_i }[/math], probability of successful attack on [math]\displaystyle{ T_i }[/math] is [math]\displaystyle{ \frac{1}{2^n} }[/math]. The expected payoff matrix when [math]\displaystyle{ n = 2, k = 3 }[/math], where the attackers are the row players is:
{#[math]\displaystyle{ D_1 }[/math],#[math]\displaystyle{ D_2 }[/math]} | {0, 3} | {1, 2} | {2, 1} | {3, 0} |
---|---|---|---|---|
[math]\displaystyle{ T_1 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -R_1 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -\frac{1}{2}R_1 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -\frac{1}{4}R_1 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -\frac{1}{8}R_1 }[/math] |
[math]\displaystyle{ T_2 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -\frac{1}{8}R_2 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -\frac{1}{4}R_2 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -\frac{1}{2}R_2 }[/math] | [math]\displaystyle{ -R_2 }[/math] |
For a multi-stage game the attacker can launch [math]\displaystyle{ t }[/math] attacks, one in each stage while defender can only stick with stage 1. The attacker may change target if the attack in stage 1 is failed. Three experiments are run with [math]\displaystyle{ n = 2, k = 5 }[/math] for games with single attack and double attack, i.e, [math]\displaystyle{ t = 1 }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ t = 2 }[/math]. The results of simulated experiments are shown below [1]:
They learned [math]\displaystyle{ R_i }[/math] only based on observations of the defender’s actions and could still recover the game set by only observing the defender’s actions. Same as expectation, the larger dataset size improves the learned parameters. Two outliers are 1) Security Game, the green plot for when [math]\displaystyle{ t = 2 }[/math]; and 2) RPS, when comparing between training sizes of 2000 and 5000.
Conclusion
Unsurprisingly, the results of this study show that in general, the quality of learned parameters improved as the number of observations increased. The network presented in this paper demonstrated improvement over the existing methodology.
This paper presents an end-to-end framework for implementing a game solver, for both extensive and normal form, as a module in a deep neural network for zero-sum games. This method, unlike many previous works in this area, does not require the parameters of the game to be known to the agent prior to the start of the game. The two-part method analytically computes both the optimal solution and the parameters of the game. Future work involves taking advantage of the KKT matrix structure to increase computation speed and extensions to the area of learning general-sum games.
Critiques
The proposed method appears to suffer from two flaws. Firstly, the assumption that players behave in accordance with the QRE severely limits the space of player strategies and is known to exhibit pathological behavior even in one-player settings. Second, the solvers are computationally inefficient and are unable to scale. For this setting, they used Newton's method and it is found that the second-order algorithms do not scale to large games as with Nash equilibrium [4].
In the one-card poker section, it might be better to write "Next, they investigated extensive form games ... It may even be a function of contextual features such as the demographics of players. ... 5 runs of training, with the same weights but different training sets."
Zero-Sum Normal Form Games usually follow Gaussian distributions with two non-empty sets of strategies of player one and player two correspondingly, and also a payoff function defined on the set of possible realizations.
This method of proposing that real players will follow a laid out scheme or playing strategy is almost always a drastic oversimplification of real-world scenarios and severely limits the applications. In order to better fit a model to the real players, there almost always has to be some sort of stochastic implementation which accounts for the presence of irrational users in the system.
It might be a good idea to discuss the algorithm performance based on more complicated player reactions, for example, player 2 or NPC from the game might react based on player 1's action. If player 2 would react with a "clever" choice, we might be able to shrink the choice space, which might be helpful to accelerate the training time.
The theory assumes rational players, which means that roughly speaking, the players make decisions based on increasing their respective payoffs (utility values, preferences,..). However, in real-life scenarios, this might not hold true. Thus, it would be a good idea to include considerations regarding this issue in this summary. Another area that is worth exploring is the need for things like “bluffing” in games with hidden information. It would be interesting to see whether the results generated in this paper are in support of "bluffing" or not.
It is good that the authors of this paper provided analysis on different types of games, but it would be great if they could also provide some future insights on this method such as whether it can be applied to more complex games such as blackjack poker / it would work or not.
The authors evaluated the performance by plotting the mean squared error (MSE) of the training data. Prediction error on testing data can also be provided to better evaluate the prediction power.
References
[1] Ling, C. K., Fang, F., & Kolter, J. Z. (2018). What game are we playing? end-to-end learning in normal and extensive form games. arXiv preprint arXiv:1805.02777.
[2] B. von Stengel. Efficient computation of behavior strategies.Games and Economics Behavior,14(0050):220–246, 1996.
[3] Boyd, S., Boyd, S. P., & Vandenberghe, L. (2004). Convex optimization. Cambridge university press.
[4] Farina, G., Kroer, C., & Sandholm, T. (2019). Online Convex Optimization for Sequential Decision Processes and Extensive-Form Games. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 33(01), 1917-1925. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v33i01.33011917
[5] Larson, K. Game-theoretic methods for computer science Normal Form Games. Lecture presented at CS 886 in University of Waterloo, Waterloo. Retrieved from https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwiL24iwprrtAhWJFFkFHU52D0MQFjAQegQIIhAC&url=https://cs.uwaterloo.ca/~klarson/teaching/F06-886/slides/normalform.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0j9fw9oRkUGZOsY8ZCyv6i