Abstract
Learning to cooperate with other agents is challenging when those agents also possess the ability to adapt to our own behavior. Practical and theoretical approaches to learning in cooperative settings typically assume that other agents' behaviors are stationary, or else make very specific assumptions about other agents' learning processes. The goal of this work is to understand whether we can reliably learn to cooperate with other agents without such restrictive assumptions, which are unlikely to hold in real-world applications. Our main contribution is a set of impossibility results, which show that no learning algorithm can reliably learn to cooperate with all possible adaptive partners in a repeated matrix game, even if that partner is guaranteed to cooperate with some stationary strategy. Motivated by these results, we then discuss potential alternative assumptions which capture the idea that an adaptive partner will only adapt rationally to our behavior.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 14197-14209 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
| Journal | Proceedings of Machine Learning Research |
| Volume | 162 |
| Publication status | Published - 2022 |
| Event | 39th International Conference on Machine Learning, ICML 2022 - Baltimore, United States Duration: 17 Jul 2022 → 23 Jul 2022 |
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