The traditional model of two-sided matching assumes that all agents fully know their own preferences. As markets grow large, however, it becomes impractical for agents to precisely assess their rankings over all agents on the other side of the market. We propose a novel model of two-sided matching in which agents are endowed with known partially ordered preferences and unknown true preferences drawn from known distributions consistent with the partial order. The true preferences are learned through interviews, revealing the pairwise rankings among all interviewed agents, performed according to a centralized interview policy, i.e., an algorithm that adaptively schedules interviews. Our goal is for the policy to guarantee both stability and o...
Matching markets are ubiquitous, including college admissions, school choice, reviewer paper matchin...
Most of the two-sided matching literature maintains the assumption that agents are never indifferent...
In the stable matching problem, given a two-sided matching market where each agent has ordinal prefe...
In this paper we study two-sided matching markets in which the participants do not fully know their ...
In this paper we study two-sided matching markets in which the participants do not fully know their ...
In this paper we study two-sided matching markets in which the participants do not fully know their ...
Two classes of widely studied markets are auctions, such as eBay, and two-sided matching markets, su...
We study two-sided matching markets in which participants are initially endowed with partial prefere...
We study two-sided matching markets in which participants are initially endowed with partial prefere...
While stable matching problems are widely studied, little work has investigated schemes for effectiv...
AbstractWe investigate models of two-sided matching markets without transfers. Examples of such mark...
A stylized fact of most centralized matching markets (for example school choice problems is that pa...
International audienceIn a two-sided matching context we show how we can predict stable matchings by...
In large centralized matching markets like school choice problems participants usually submit prefer...
This thesis is divided into three chapters. In the first chapter, I study the use of an alternative ...
Matching markets are ubiquitous, including college admissions, school choice, reviewer paper matchin...
Most of the two-sided matching literature maintains the assumption that agents are never indifferent...
In the stable matching problem, given a two-sided matching market where each agent has ordinal prefe...
In this paper we study two-sided matching markets in which the participants do not fully know their ...
In this paper we study two-sided matching markets in which the participants do not fully know their ...
In this paper we study two-sided matching markets in which the participants do not fully know their ...
Two classes of widely studied markets are auctions, such as eBay, and two-sided matching markets, su...
We study two-sided matching markets in which participants are initially endowed with partial prefere...
We study two-sided matching markets in which participants are initially endowed with partial prefere...
While stable matching problems are widely studied, little work has investigated schemes for effectiv...
AbstractWe investigate models of two-sided matching markets without transfers. Examples of such mark...
A stylized fact of most centralized matching markets (for example school choice problems is that pa...
International audienceIn a two-sided matching context we show how we can predict stable matchings by...
In large centralized matching markets like school choice problems participants usually submit prefer...
This thesis is divided into three chapters. In the first chapter, I study the use of an alternative ...
Matching markets are ubiquitous, including college admissions, school choice, reviewer paper matchin...
Most of the two-sided matching literature maintains the assumption that agents are never indifferent...
In the stable matching problem, given a two-sided matching market where each agent has ordinal prefe...