Randomized Strategyproof Mechanisms for Facility Location and the Mini-Sum-of-Squares Objective
Abstract
We consider the problem of locating a public facility on a line, where a set of n strategic agents report their locations and a mechanism determines, either deterministically or randomly, the location of the facility. Game theoretic perspectives of the facility location problem advanced in two main directions. The first direction is concerned with the characterization of strategyproof (SP) mechanisms; i.e., mechanisms that induce truthful reporting as a dominant strategy; and the second direction quantifies how well various objective functions can be approximated when restricted to SP mechanisms. The current paper provides contributions in both directions. First, we construct a parameterized randomized SP mechanism, and show that all of the previously proposed deterministic and randomized SP mechanisms for the current settings can be formalized as special cases of this mechanism. Second, we give tight results for the approximation ratio of SP mechanisms with respect to the objective of minimizing the sum of squares of distances to the agents (miniSOS). Holzman Holzman1990 provided an axiomatic foundation for this function, showing that it is the unique function that satisfies unanimity, continuity and invariance. We devise a randomized mechanism that gives a 1.5-approximation for the miniSOS function, and show that no other randomized SP mechanism can provide a better approximation. This mechanism chooses the average location with probability 1/2 and a random dictator with probability 1/2. For deterministic mechanisms, we show that the median mechanism provides a 2-approximation, and this is tight. Together, our study provides fundamental understanding of the miniSOS objective function and makes a step toward the characterization of randomized SP facility location mechanisms.
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