The voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find an alternative closest to being a Condorcet winner, according to two different notions of proximity; the score of a given alternative is known to be hard to compute under either rule. In this paper, we put forward two algorithms for approximating the Dodgson score: a combinatorial, greedy algorithm and an LP-based algorithm, both of which yield an approximation ratio of Hm−1, where m is the number of alternatives and Hm−1 is the (m − 1)st harmonic number. We also prove that our algorithms are optimal within a factor of 2, unless problems in NP have quasi-polynomial time algorithms. Despite the intuitive appeal of the greedy algorithm, we argue that the LP-based algorit...
ABSTRACT. It is known that Dodgson's rule is computationally very demanding. Tideman (1987) sug...
Election rules are formal processes that aggregate voters' preferences, typically to select a single...
In their groundbreaking paper, Bartholdi, Tovey and Trick [6] argued that many well-known voting rul...
AbstractThe voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find an alternative clos...
The voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find the alternative closest to ...
The voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to nd the alternative closest to be...
In 1876 Charles Lutwidge Dodgson suggested the intriguing voting rule that today bears his name. Alt...
In 1876, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson suggested the intriguing voting rule that today bears his name. Al...
The Dodgson score problem is part of the Dodgson election scheme invented by Charles Dodgson and pre...
Computing the Dodgson Score of a candidate in an election is a hard computational problem, which has...
In 1876, Lewis Carroll proposed a voting system in which the winner is the candidate who with the fe...
We investigate issues related to two hard problems related to voting, the optimal weighted lobbying ...
In the year 1876 the mathematician Charles Dodgson, who wrote fiction under the now more famous name...
Abstract. In 1977 Young proposed a voting scheme that extends the Condorcet Principle based on the f...
We investigate issues related to two hard problems related to voting, the optimal weighted lobbying ...
ABSTRACT. It is known that Dodgson's rule is computationally very demanding. Tideman (1987) sug...
Election rules are formal processes that aggregate voters' preferences, typically to select a single...
In their groundbreaking paper, Bartholdi, Tovey and Trick [6] argued that many well-known voting rul...
AbstractThe voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find an alternative clos...
The voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find the alternative closest to ...
The voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to nd the alternative closest to be...
In 1876 Charles Lutwidge Dodgson suggested the intriguing voting rule that today bears his name. Alt...
In 1876, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson suggested the intriguing voting rule that today bears his name. Al...
The Dodgson score problem is part of the Dodgson election scheme invented by Charles Dodgson and pre...
Computing the Dodgson Score of a candidate in an election is a hard computational problem, which has...
In 1876, Lewis Carroll proposed a voting system in which the winner is the candidate who with the fe...
We investigate issues related to two hard problems related to voting, the optimal weighted lobbying ...
In the year 1876 the mathematician Charles Dodgson, who wrote fiction under the now more famous name...
Abstract. In 1977 Young proposed a voting scheme that extends the Condorcet Principle based on the f...
We investigate issues related to two hard problems related to voting, the optimal weighted lobbying ...
ABSTRACT. It is known that Dodgson's rule is computationally very demanding. Tideman (1987) sug...
Election rules are formal processes that aggregate voters' preferences, typically to select a single...
In their groundbreaking paper, Bartholdi, Tovey and Trick [6] argued that many well-known voting rul...