Abstract
Kidney exchange programs (KEPs) increase kidney transplantation by facilitating the exchange of incompatible donors. Increasing the scale of KEPs leads to more opportunities for transplants. Collaboration between transplant organizations (agents) is thus desirable. As agents are primarily interested in providing transplants for their own patients, collaboration requires balancing individual and common objectives. In this paper, we consider ex-post strategic behavior, where agents can modify a proposed set of kidney exchanges. We introduce the class of rejection-proof mechanisms, which propose a set of exchanges such that agents have no incentive to reject them. We provide an exact mechanism and establish that the underlying optimization problem is Σ 2 P-hard; we also describe computationally less demanding heuristic mechanisms. We show rejection-proofness can be achieved at a limited cost for typical instances. Furthermore, our experiments show that the proposed rejection-proof mechanisms also remove incentives for strategic behavior in the ex-ante setting, where agents withhold information.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 25-50 |
Number of pages | 26 |
Journal | Games and Economic Behavior |
Volume | 143 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jan 2024 |
Funding
The authors thank Péter Biró for helpful discussions. The research of Frits Spieksma is supported by Dutch Research Council (NWO) Gravitation Project NETWORKS [Grant 024.002.003 ].
Funders | Funder number |
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Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek | 024.002.003 |
Keywords
- Kidney Exchange
- Bilevel programming
- Computational complexity
- Multi-Agent systems
- Kidney exchange
- Multi-agent systems