Ratip Emin Berker (Carnegie Mellon)- The Value of Recall in Extensive-Form Games
Abstract: Imperfect-recall games, in which players may forget previously acquired information, have found many practical applications, ranging from game abstractions to team games and testing AI agents. In this paper, we quantify the utility gain by endowing a player with perfect recall, which we call the value of recall (VoR). While VoR can be unbounded in general, we parameterize it in terms of various game properties, namely the structure of chance nodes and the degree of absentmindedness (the number of successive times a player enters the same information set). Further, we identify several pathologies that arise with VoR, and show how to circumvent them. We also study the complexity of computing VoR, and how to optimally apportion partial recall. Finally, we connect VoR to other previously studied concepts in game theory, including the price of anarchy. We use that connection in conjunction with the celebrated smoothness framework to characterize VoR in a broad class of games.
Speakers

Ratip Emin Berker
Emin is a second-year PhD student in the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University. Advised by Vincent Conitzer, he is a member of the Foundations of Cooperative AI Lab (FOCAL), and supported in part by the Cooperative AI PhD Fellowship. His research involves problems in the intersection of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence. Specifically, he is interested in using tools from algorithmic game theory and computational social choice to achieve cooperation in multi-agent settings, especially when the number of agents is ex ante unclear. Before CMU, Emin graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University, receiving a joint degree in Chemistry and Physics and Mathematics, with a secondary in Neuroscience, and a concurrent masters in Computer Science. While at Harvard, he was mentored by Ariel Procaccia. Emin is originally from Istanbul, Turkey. In his free time, he likes cooking, hiking, and watching Turkish soap operas at 3x speed.