Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network

We discuss voting scenarios in which the set of voters (agents) and the set of alternatives are the same; that is, voters select a single representative from among themselves. Such a scenario happens, for instance, when a committee selects a chairperson, or when peer researchers select a prize winne...

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Main Authors: Yakov Babichenko, Oren Dean, Moshe Tennenholtz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Publishing Association 2019-07-01
Series:Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
Online Access:http://arxiv.org/pdf/1807.03978v1
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spelling doaj-c31f2c84c2b74d3686208ba584364e172020-11-25T02:43:14ZengOpen Publishing AssociationElectronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science2075-21802019-07-01297Proc. TARK 2019193410.4204/EPTCS.297.2:35Sequential Voting with Confirmation NetworkYakov BabichenkoOren DeanMoshe TennenholtzWe discuss voting scenarios in which the set of voters (agents) and the set of alternatives are the same; that is, voters select a single representative from among themselves. Such a scenario happens, for instance, when a committee selects a chairperson, or when peer researchers select a prize winner. Our model assumes that each voter either renders worthy (confirms) or unworthy any other agent. We further assume that the prime goal of each agent is to be selected himself. Only if that is not feasible, will he try to get one of those that he confirms selected. In this paper, we investigate the open-sequential voting system in the above model. We consider both plurality (where each voter has one vote) and approval (where a voter may vote for any subset). Our results show that it is possible to find scenarios in which the selected agent is much less popular than the optimal (most popular) agent. We prove, however, that in the case of approval voting, the ratio between their popularity is always bounded from above by 2. In the case of plurality voting, we show that there are cases in which some of the equilibria give an unbounded ratio, but there always exists at least one equilibrium with ratio 2 at most.http://arxiv.org/pdf/1807.03978v1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yakov Babichenko
Oren Dean
Moshe Tennenholtz
spellingShingle Yakov Babichenko
Oren Dean
Moshe Tennenholtz
Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network
Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
author_facet Yakov Babichenko
Oren Dean
Moshe Tennenholtz
author_sort Yakov Babichenko
title Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network
title_short Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network
title_full Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network
title_fullStr Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network
title_full_unstemmed Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network
title_sort sequential voting with confirmation network
publisher Open Publishing Association
series Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
issn 2075-2180
publishDate 2019-07-01
description We discuss voting scenarios in which the set of voters (agents) and the set of alternatives are the same; that is, voters select a single representative from among themselves. Such a scenario happens, for instance, when a committee selects a chairperson, or when peer researchers select a prize winner. Our model assumes that each voter either renders worthy (confirms) or unworthy any other agent. We further assume that the prime goal of each agent is to be selected himself. Only if that is not feasible, will he try to get one of those that he confirms selected. In this paper, we investigate the open-sequential voting system in the above model. We consider both plurality (where each voter has one vote) and approval (where a voter may vote for any subset). Our results show that it is possible to find scenarios in which the selected agent is much less popular than the optimal (most popular) agent. We prove, however, that in the case of approval voting, the ratio between their popularity is always bounded from above by 2. In the case of plurality voting, we show that there are cases in which some of the equilibria give an unbounded ratio, but there always exists at least one equilibrium with ratio 2 at most.
url http://arxiv.org/pdf/1807.03978v1
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AT orendean sequentialvotingwithconfirmationnetwork
AT moshetennenholtz sequentialvotingwithconfirmationnetwork
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