The El Farol bar problem is a problem in
game theory. Every Thursday night, a fixed population want to go have fun at the El Farol Bar, unless it's too crowded.
* If less than 60% of the population go to the bar, they'll all have more fun than if they stayed home.
* If more than 60% of the population go to the bar, they'll all have less fun than if they stayed home.
Everyone must decide ''at the same time'' whether to go or not, with no knowledge of others' choices.
Paradoxically, if everyone uses a deterministic
pure strategy
In game theory, a player's strategy is any of the options which they choose in a setting where the outcome depends ''not only'' on their own actions ''but'' on the actions of others. The discipline mainly concerns the action of a player in a game ...
which is symmetric (same strategy for all players), it is guaranteed to fail no matter what it is. If the strategy suggests it will not be crowded, everyone will go, and thus it ''will'' be crowded; but if the strategy suggests it will be crowded, nobody will go, and thus it will ''not'' be crowded, but again no one will have fun. Better success is possible with a probabilistic
mixed strategy
In game theory, a player's strategy is any of the options which they choose in a setting where the outcome depends ''not only'' on their own actions ''but'' on the actions of others. The discipline mainly concerns the action of a player in a game ...
. For the single-stage El Farol Bar problem, there exists a unique symmetric
Nash equilibrium
In game theory, the Nash equilibrium, named after the mathematician John Nash, is the most common way to define the solution of a non-cooperative game involving two or more players. In a Nash equilibrium, each player is assumed to know the equ ...
mixed strategy where all players choose to go to the bar with a certain probability, determined according to the number of players, the threshold for crowdedness, and the relative utility of going to a crowded or uncrowded bar compared to staying home. There are also multiple Nash equilibria in which one or more players use a pure strategy, but these equilibria are not symmetric. Several variants are considered in ''Game Theory Evolving'' by
Herbert Gintis
Herbert Gintis (February 11, 1940 – January 5, 2023) was an American economist, behavioral scientist, and educator known for his theoretical contributions to sociobiology, especially altruism, cooperation, epistemic game theory, gene-culture co ...
.
In some variants of the problem, the players are allowed to communicate before deciding to go to the bar. However, they are not required to tell the truth.
Named after a bar in
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Santa Fe ( ; , Spanish for 'Holy Faith'; tew, Oghá P'o'oge, Tewa for 'white shell water place'; tiw, Hulp'ó'ona, label= Northern Tiwa; nv, Yootó, Navajo for 'bead + water place') is the capital of the U.S. state of New Mexico. The name “S ...
, the problem was created in 1994 by
W. Brian Arthur. However, under another name, the problem was formulated and solved dynamically six years earlier by B. A. Huberman and T. Hogg.
Minority game
A variant is the Minority Game proposed by Yi-Cheng Zhang and Damien Challet from the
University of Fribourg
The University of Fribourg (french: Université de Fribourg; german: Universität Freiburg) is a public university located in Fribourg, Switzerland.
The roots of the university can be traced back to 1580, when the notable Jesuit Peter Canisi ...
. An odd number of players each must make a binary choice independently at each turn, and the winners are those players who end up on the minority side. As in the El Farol Bar problem, no single (symmetric) deterministic strategy can give an equilibrium, but for mixed strategies, there is a unique symmetric Nash equilibrium (each player chooses with 50% probability), as well as multiple asymmetric equilibria.
A multi-stage, cooperative Minority Game was featured in the manga ''
Liar Game
''Liar Game'' (stylized as ''LIAR GAME'') is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shinobu Kaitani. It was serialized in Shueisha's ''seinen'' manga magazine ''Weekly Young Jump'' from February 2005 to January 2015. It was ada ...
'', in which the majority was repeatedly eliminated until only one player was left.
Kolkata Paise Restaurant Problem
Another variant of the El Farol Bar problem is the Kolkata Paise Restaurant Problem,
named for the many cheap restaurants where laborers can grab a quick lunch, but may have to return to work hungry if their chosen restaurant is too crowded. Formally, a large number ''N'' of players each choose one of a large number ''n'' of restaurants, typically ''N'' = ''n'' (while in the El Farol Bar Problem, ''n'' = 2, including the stay-home option). At each restaurant, one customer at random is served lunch (
payoff = 1) while all others lose (payoff = 0). The players do not know each others' choices on a given day, but the game is repeated daily, and the history of all players' choices is available to everyone. Optimally, each player chooses a different restaurant, but this is practically impossible without coordination, resulting in both hungry customers and unattended restaurants wasting capacity.
Strategies are evaluated based on their aggregate payoff and/or the proportion of attended restaurants (utilization ratio). A leading stochastic strategy, with utilization ~0.79, gives each customer a probability ''p'' of choosing the same restaurant as yesterday (''p'' varying inversely with the number of players who chose that restaurant yesterday), while choosing among other restaurants with uniform probability. This is a better result than deterministic algorithms or simple random choice (
noise trader A noise trader is a stock trader whose decisions to buy or sell are based on "factors they believe to be helpful but in reality will give them no better returns than random choices". These factors may include hype or rumor, which noise traders belie ...
), with utilization fraction 1 -
1/''
e'' ≈ 0.63.
In a similar problem, there are hospital beds in every locality, but patients are tempted to go to prestigious hospitals out of their district. However, if too many patients go to a prestige hospital, some get no hospital bed at all, while additionally wasting the unused beds at their local hospitals.
References
Further reading
*
External links
An Introductory Guide to the Minority GameMinority Games(a popularization account)
Minority game on arxiv.orgEl Farol bar in Santa Fe, New MexicoThe El Farol Bar problem in Javausin
The Java Agent-Based Modelling Toolkit (JABM)Kolkata Paise Restaurant (KPR) Problem: Wolfram Demonstrations
{{game theory
Non-cooperative games