Helly metric

1

In game theory, the Helly metric is used to assess the distance between two strategies. It is named for Eduard Helly.

Definition

Consider a game, between player I and II. Here, and are the sets of pure strategies for players I and II respectively. The payoff function is denoted by. In other words, if player I plays and player II plays, then player I pays H(x,y) to player II. The Helly metric is defined as The metric so defined is symmetric, reflexive, and satisfies the triangle inequality.

Properties

The Helly metric measures distances between strategies, not in terms of the differences between the strategies themselves, but in terms of the consequences of the strategies. Two strategies are distant if their payoffs are different. Note that does not imply x_1=x_2 but it does imply that the consequences of x_1 and x_2 are identical; and indeed this induces an equivalence relation. If one stipulates that implies x_1=x_2, then the topology so induced is called the natural topology. The metric on the space of player II's strategies is analogous: Note that \Gamma thus defines two Helly metrics: one for each player's strategy space.

Conditional compactness

Recall the definition of \epsilon-net: A set X_\epsilon is an \epsilon-net in the space X with metric \rho if for any x\in X there exists with. A metric space P is conditionally compact (or precompact), if for any \epsilon>0 there exists a finite \epsilon-net in P. Any game that is conditionally compact in the Helly metric has an \epsilon-optimal strategy for any \epsilon>0. fMoreover, if the space of strategies for one player is conditionally compact, then the space of strategies for the other player is conditionally compact (in their Helly metric).

This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.

Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the Wikimedia Foundation.

View original