Abstract

Synthesis is the automated construction of a system from its specification. The system has to satisfy its specification in all possible environments. The environment often consists of agents that have objectives of their own. Thus, it makes sense to soften the universal quantification on the behavior of the environment and take the objectives of its underlying agents into an account. Fisman et al. introduced rational synthesis: the problem of synthesis in the context of rational agents. The input to the problem consists of temporal logic formulas specifying the objectives of the system and the agents that constitute the environment, and a solution concept (e.g., Nash equilibrium). The output is a profile of strategies, for the system and the agents, such that the objective of the system is satisfied in the computation that is the outcome of the strategies, and the profile is stable according to the solution concept; that is, the agents that constitute the environment have no incentive to deviate from the strategies suggested to them. In this paper we continue to study rational synthesis. First, we suggest an alternative definition to rational synthesis, in which the agents are rational but not cooperative. We call such problem strong rational synthesis. In the strong rational synthesis setting, one cannot assume that the agents that constitute the environment take into account the strategies suggested to them. Accordingly, the output is a strategy for the system only, and the objective of the system has to be satisfied in all the compositions that are the outcome of a stable profile in which the system follows this strategy. We show that strong rational synthesis is 2ExpTime-complete, thus it is not more complex than traditional synthesis or rational synthesis. Second, we study a richer specification formalism, where the objectives of the system and the agents are not Boolean but quantitative. In this setting, the objective of the system and the agents is to maximize their outcome. The quantitative setting significantly extends the scope of rational synthesis, making the game-theoretic approach much more relevant. Finally, we enrich the setting to one that allows coalitions of agents that constitute the system or the environment.

Highlights

  • Synthesis is the automated construction of a system from its specification

  • We argue that the definition of rational synthesis in [14] is cooperative, in the sense that the agents that constitute the environment are assumed to follow the strategy profile suggested to them

  • In the rational synthesis problem for OLTL, the input consists of OLTL specifications for the system and the other agents, and the objective of the system is to maximize its reward with respect to environments that are in an equilibrium

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Synthesis is the automated construction of a system from its specification. The basic idea is simple and appealing: instead of developing a system and verifying that it adheres to its specification, we would like to have an automated procedure that, given a specification, constructs a system that is correct by construction. The input to the rational synthesis problem consists of LTL formulas specifying the objectives of the system and the agents that constitute the environment, and a solution concept, e.g., dominant strategies, Nash Equilibria, and the like. We consider a strong setting, in which the agents that constitute the environment may follow any strategy profile that is in an equilibrium, and not necessarily the one suggested to them by the synthesis algorithm. In the rational synthesis problem for OLTL, the input consists of OLTL specifications for the system and the other agents, and the objective of the system is to maximize its reward with respect to environments that are in an equilibrium. We show that the quantitative setting is not more complex than the non-quantitative one, quantitative rational synthesis is complete for EXPTIME in both the non-strong and strong settings

Preliminaries
Strategy logic
Rational synthesis
Solution concepts
Formal definition of rational synthesis
Qualitative rational synthesis
Quantitative rational synthesis
Objective
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call