Suppose that a group of individuals must classify objects into three or more categories, and does so by aggregating the individual classifications. We show that if the classifications, both individual and collective, are required to put at least one object in each category, then no aggregation rule can satisfy a unanimity and an independence condition without being dictatorial. This impossibility theorem extends a result that Kasher and Rubinstein (1997) proved for two categories and complements another that Dokow and Holzman (2010) obtained for three or more categories under the condition that classifications put at most one object in each category. The paper discusses an interpretation of its result both in terms of Kasher and Rubinstein’...
Suppose the members of a group (e.g., committee, jury, expert panel) each form a judgment on which w...
Comments welcome. I study a model of group identification in which individuals ’ opinions as to the ...
This paper presents a model of group formation based on the assumption that individuals prefer to as...
Suppose that a group of individuals must classify objects into three or more categories, and does so...
A classification is a surjective mapping from a set of objects to a set of categories. A classificat...
The concern of this paper is the aggregation of sets of rationally connected judgments that the memb...
Suppose the members of a group (e.g., committee, jury, expert panel) each form a judgment on which w...
Consider the following social choice problem. A group of individuals seek to classify the elements o...
We study a model of group identification in which individuals’ opinions as to the membership of a gr...
Consider the following social choice problem. A group of individuals seek to partition a finite set ...
There are many methods to design classifiers for the supervised classification problem. In this pape...
Abstract: There are many methods to design classifiers for the supervised classification problem. In...
Modeling of combined classification problem-solving knowledge from a group of decision makers is ass...
Abstract Among the many sorts of problems encountered in decision theory, allocation problems occupy...
In axiomatic approaches to expert opinion aggregation, so-called independence conditions have been u...
Suppose the members of a group (e.g., committee, jury, expert panel) each form a judgment on which w...
Comments welcome. I study a model of group identification in which individuals ’ opinions as to the ...
This paper presents a model of group formation based on the assumption that individuals prefer to as...
Suppose that a group of individuals must classify objects into three or more categories, and does so...
A classification is a surjective mapping from a set of objects to a set of categories. A classificat...
The concern of this paper is the aggregation of sets of rationally connected judgments that the memb...
Suppose the members of a group (e.g., committee, jury, expert panel) each form a judgment on which w...
Consider the following social choice problem. A group of individuals seek to classify the elements o...
We study a model of group identification in which individuals’ opinions as to the membership of a gr...
Consider the following social choice problem. A group of individuals seek to partition a finite set ...
There are many methods to design classifiers for the supervised classification problem. In this pape...
Abstract: There are many methods to design classifiers for the supervised classification problem. In...
Modeling of combined classification problem-solving knowledge from a group of decision makers is ass...
Abstract Among the many sorts of problems encountered in decision theory, allocation problems occupy...
In axiomatic approaches to expert opinion aggregation, so-called independence conditions have been u...
Suppose the members of a group (e.g., committee, jury, expert panel) each form a judgment on which w...
Comments welcome. I study a model of group identification in which individuals ’ opinions as to the ...
This paper presents a model of group formation based on the assumption that individuals prefer to as...