Colorful linear programming, Nash equilibrium, and pivots

Abstract

The colorful Carath\'eodory theorem, proved by B\'ar\'any in 1982, states that given d+1 sets of points S1,...,Sd+1 in Rd, with each Si containing 0 in its convex hull, there exists a subset T of the union of the Si's containing 0 in its convex hull and such that T contains at most one point from each Si. An intriguing question -- still open -- is whether such a set T, whose existence is ensured, can be found in polynomial time. In 1997, B\'ar\'any and Onn defined colorful linear programming as algorithmic questions related to the colorful Carath\'eodory theorem. The question we just mentioned comes under colorful linear programming. The traditional applications of colorful linear programming lie in discrete geometry. In this paper, we study its relations with other areas, such as game theory, operations research, and combinatorics. Regarding game theory, we prove that computing a Nash equilibrium in a bimatrix game is a colorful linear programming problem. We also formulate an optimization problem for colorful linear programming and show that as for usual linear programming, deciding and optimizing are computationally equivalent. We discuss then a colorful version of Dantzig's diet problem. We also propose a variant of the B\'ar\'any algorithm, which is an algorithm computing a set T whose existence is ensured by the colorful Carath\'eodory theorem. Our algorithm makes a clear connection with the simplex algorithm and we discuss its computational efficiency. Related complexity and combinatorial results are also provided.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…