Title:
Algorithmic manipulation of probability distributions for networks and mechanisms
Algorithmic manipulation of probability distributions for networks and mechanisms
Authors
Durfee, David
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Advisors
Peng, Richard
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Abstract
In this thesis we present four different works that solve problems in
dynamic graph algorithms, spectral graph algorithms, computational
economics, and differential privacy. While these areas are not all
strongly correlated, there were similar techniques integral to each of
the results. In particular, a key to each result was carefully constructing probability distributions that interact with fast algorithms on networks or mechanisms for economic games and private data output. For the fast algorithms on networks this required utilizing essential graph properties for each network to determine sampling
probabilities for sparsification procedures that we often recursively
applied to achieve runtime speedups. For mechanisms in economic games we construct a gadget game mechanism by carefully manipulating the expected payoff resulting from the probability distribution on the strategy space to give a correspondence between two economic games and imply a hardness equivalence. For mechanisms on private data output we construct a smoothing framework for input data that allows private output from known mechanisms while still maintaining certain levels of accuracy.
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Date Issued
2018-12-19
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Dissertation