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Tuesday, December 04, 2018
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Annenberg 314

CMI Seminar

Reasoning in Bayesian Opinion Exchange Networks is Computationally Hard
Jan Hazla, MIT,

Bayesian models of opinion exchange are extensively studied in economics, dating back to the work of Aumann on the agreement theorem.  An important class of such models features agents arranged on a network (representing, e.g., social interactions), with the network structure determining which agents communicate with each other. It is often argued that the Bayesian computations needed by agents in such models are difficult, but prior to our work there were no rigorous arguments for such hardness.

We consider a well-studied model where fully rational agents receive private signals indicative of an unknown state of the world. Then, they repeatedly announce the state of the world they consider most likely to their neighbors, at the same time updating their beliefs based on their neighbors' announcements.

I will discuss our complexity-theoretic results establishing hardness of agents' computations in this model. Specifically, we show that these computations are NP-hard and extend this result to PSPACE-hardness. We show hardness not only for exact computations, but also that it is computationally difficult even to approximate the rational opinion in any meaningful way.

Joint work with Ali Jadbababie, Elchanan Mossel and Amin Rahimian.

For more information, please contact Linda Taddeo by phone at 626-395-6704 or by email at [email protected] or visit Mathematics of Information Seminar - Upcoming Events.