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Power Systems Computation Conference 2024

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Non-Stationarity In Multiagent Reinforcement Learning In Electricity Market Simulation

The design of electricity markets may be facilitated by simulating actors' behaviors. Recent studies model human decision-makers within markets as agents which learn strategies that maximize expected profits. This work investigates the problem of 'non-stationarity' in the context of market simulations, a problem with the learning-algorithms used by such studies which results in agents behaving irrationally, thus limiting the studies' applicability to real-world strategic behavior. Isolating the source of the problem for a day-ahead electricity market, this paper proposes methods which meliorate this problem in simple test-cases, and proves requirements under which 'centralized-training, decentralized-execution' value-learning methods will converge to correct behavior in general. Subsequently, this paper proposes a framework for 'adversarial market design' that includes the market-designer as an agent. This allows the optimization of market-designs subject to possibly strategic behavior of participating firms - in turn enabling the automated selection of the optimal market from any set of markets.

Charles Renshaw-Whitman
Faculty of Technology, Policy, and Management, Delft University, Netherlands
Netherlands

Viktor Zobernig
Centre for Energy, Austrian Institute of Technology
Austria

Jochen Cremer
Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics, and Computer Science, Delft University, Netherlands
Netherlands

Laurens de Vries
Faculty of Technology, Policy, and Management, Delft University, Netherlands
Netherlands

 


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