Private Interdependent Valuations: New Bounds for Single-Item Auctions and Matroids

Abstract

We study auction design within the widely acclaimed model of interdependent values, introduced by Milgrom and Weber [1982]. In this model, every bidder i has a private signal si for the item for sale, and a public valuation function vi(s1,…,sn) which maps every vector of private signals (of all bidders) into a real value. A recent line of work established the existence of approximately-optimal mechanisms within this framework, even in the more challenging scenario where each bidder's valuation function vi is also private. This body of work has primarily focused on single-item auctions with two natural classes of valuations: those exhibiting submodularity over signals (SOS) and d-critical valuations. In this work we advance the state of the art on interdependent values with private valuation functions, with respect to both SOS and d-critical valuations. For SOS valuations, we devise a new mechanism that gives an improved approximation bound of 5 for single-item auctions. This mechanism employs a novel variant of an "eating mechanism", leveraging LP-duality to achieve feasibility with reduced welfare loss. For d-critical valuations, we broaden the scope of existing results beyond single-item auctions, introducing a mechanism that gives a (d+1)-approximation for any environment with matroid feasibility constraints on the set of agents that can be simultaneously served. Notably, this approximation bound is tight, even with respect to single-item auctions.

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…