In several school choice districts in the United States, the student proposing deferred acceptance algorithm is applied after indifferences in priority orders are broken in some exogenous way. Although such a tie-breaking procedure preserves stability, it adversely affects the welfare of the students since it introduces artificial stability constraints. Our main finding is a polynomial-time algorithm for the computation of a student-optimal stable matching when priorities are weak. The idea behind our construction relies on a new notion which we call a stable improvement cycle. We also investigate the strategic properties of the student-optimal stable mechanism.
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
Economists have extensively been studying and designing well-functioning algorithmic allocation (or ...
In several school choice districts in the United States, the student proposing deferred acceptance a...
In several school choice districts in the United States, the student proposing deferred acceptance a...
Very little is known about the student-optimal stable mechanism when school priorities are weak. In ...
In school choice problems with weak priorities, the deferred acceptance (DA) mechanism may produce i...
We consider the problem of assigning students to schools on the basis of priorities. Students are al...
We introduce a new stability notion called preference respecting stability that incorporates toleran...
We introduce the notion of sticky-stability in order to accommodate appeal costs in real-life school...
of the New York City (NYC) High School match involved tradeoffs between incentives and efficiency, b...
Truthful revelation of preferences has emerged as a desideratum in the design of school choice progr...
In college admissions and student placements at public schools, the admission decision can be though...
In college admissions and student placements at public schools, the admission decision can be though...
AA classic trade-off that school districts face when deciding which matching algorithm to use is tha...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
Economists have extensively been studying and designing well-functioning algorithmic allocation (or ...
In several school choice districts in the United States, the student proposing deferred acceptance a...
In several school choice districts in the United States, the student proposing deferred acceptance a...
Very little is known about the student-optimal stable mechanism when school priorities are weak. In ...
In school choice problems with weak priorities, the deferred acceptance (DA) mechanism may produce i...
We consider the problem of assigning students to schools on the basis of priorities. Students are al...
We introduce a new stability notion called preference respecting stability that incorporates toleran...
We introduce the notion of sticky-stability in order to accommodate appeal costs in real-life school...
of the New York City (NYC) High School match involved tradeoffs between incentives and efficiency, b...
Truthful revelation of preferences has emerged as a desideratum in the design of school choice progr...
In college admissions and student placements at public schools, the admission decision can be though...
In college admissions and student placements at public schools, the admission decision can be though...
AA classic trade-off that school districts face when deciding which matching algorithm to use is tha...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
We consider school choice problems (Abdulkadiroğlu and Sönmez, 2003) where students are assigned to ...
Economists have extensively been studying and designing well-functioning algorithmic allocation (or ...