We study stable marriage and roommates problems under locality constraints. Each player is a vertex in a social network and strives to be matched to other players. The value of a match is specified by an edge weight. Players explore possible matches only based on their current neighborhood. We study convergence of natural better-response dynamics that converge to locally stable matchings – matchings that allow no incentive to deviate with respect to their imposed information structure in the social network. If we have global information and control to steer the convergence process, then quick convergence is possible and for every starting state we can construct in polynomial time a sequence of polynomially many better-response moves to a lo...
We consider the distributed complexity of the stable mar-riage problem. In this problem, the communi...
Stable matching is a widely studied problem in social choice theory. For the basiccentralized case, ...
Several strategic interactions over social networks display both negative and positive externalities...
We study stable marriage and roommates problems under locality constraints. Each player is a vertex ...
Abstract. We study two-sided matching markets with locality of in-formation and control. Each male (...
<div><p>We argue that algorithmic modeling is a powerful approach to understanding the collective dy...
We study uncoordinated matching markets with additional local constraints that capture, e.g., restri...
Motivated by the observation that most companies are more likely to consider job applicants referred...
We consider the dynamic behavior of several variants of the Network Creation Game, introduced by Fab...
We consider multi-armed bandit problems in social groups wherein each individual has bounded memory ...
We show that the ratio of matched individuals to blocking pairs grows linearly with the number of pr...
Abstract. We present a deterministic model for on-line social networks (OSNs) based on transitivity ...
We show that the ratio of matched individuals to blocking pairs grows linearly with the number of pr...
AMS subject classifications. 15A15 Abstract. We study the speed of convergence to approximately opti...
We study the stable marriage problem in a distributed setting. The communication network is a bipart...
We consider the distributed complexity of the stable mar-riage problem. In this problem, the communi...
Stable matching is a widely studied problem in social choice theory. For the basiccentralized case, ...
Several strategic interactions over social networks display both negative and positive externalities...
We study stable marriage and roommates problems under locality constraints. Each player is a vertex ...
Abstract. We study two-sided matching markets with locality of in-formation and control. Each male (...
<div><p>We argue that algorithmic modeling is a powerful approach to understanding the collective dy...
We study uncoordinated matching markets with additional local constraints that capture, e.g., restri...
Motivated by the observation that most companies are more likely to consider job applicants referred...
We consider the dynamic behavior of several variants of the Network Creation Game, introduced by Fab...
We consider multi-armed bandit problems in social groups wherein each individual has bounded memory ...
We show that the ratio of matched individuals to blocking pairs grows linearly with the number of pr...
Abstract. We present a deterministic model for on-line social networks (OSNs) based on transitivity ...
We show that the ratio of matched individuals to blocking pairs grows linearly with the number of pr...
AMS subject classifications. 15A15 Abstract. We study the speed of convergence to approximately opti...
We study the stable marriage problem in a distributed setting. The communication network is a bipart...
We consider the distributed complexity of the stable mar-riage problem. In this problem, the communi...
Stable matching is a widely studied problem in social choice theory. For the basiccentralized case, ...
Several strategic interactions over social networks display both negative and positive externalities...