We study fairness and efficiency properties of randomized algorithms for barter exchanges with direct applications to kidney exchange problems. It is well documented that randomization can serve as a tool to ensure fairness among participants. However, in many applications, practical constraints often restrict the maximum allowed cyclelength of the exchange and for randomized algorithms, this imposes constraints of the cycle-length of every realized exchange in their decomposition. We prove that standard fairness properties such as envy-freeness or symmetry are incompatible with even the weakest notion of economic efficiency in this setting. On the plus side, we adapt some well-known matching mechanisms to incorporate the restricted cycle c...
We present a credit-based matching mechanism for dynamic barter markets — and kidney exchange in par...
The privileged treatment for patients suffering from end-stage renal disease is transplantation. In ...
International audienceIn fair division of indivisible goods, using sequences of sincere choices (or ...
We study fairness and efficiency properties of randomized algorithms for barter exchanges with direc...
This paper considers the problem of allocating N indivisible objects among N agents according to the...
I study the problem of kidney exchange under strict ordinal preferences and with constraints on the ...
In barter exchanges, participants directly trade their endowed goods in a constrained economic setti...
In this dissertation, I study the properties of and propose the use of a family of random mechanisms...
I study kidney exchange with strict ordinal preferences and with constraints on the lengths of the e...
Balancing fairness and efficiency in resource allocation is a classical economic and computational p...
In barter-exchange markets, agents seek to swap their items with one another. These swaps consist of...
Kidney exchange programs, which allow a potential living donor whose kidney is incompatible with his...
We introduce and study the following exchange market mechanism problem without money: consider a set...
Kidney exchange provides a life-saving alternative to long waiting lists for patients in need of a n...
This paper experimentally studies an essential institutional feature of matching markets: Randomizat...
We present a credit-based matching mechanism for dynamic barter markets — and kidney exchange in par...
The privileged treatment for patients suffering from end-stage renal disease is transplantation. In ...
International audienceIn fair division of indivisible goods, using sequences of sincere choices (or ...
We study fairness and efficiency properties of randomized algorithms for barter exchanges with direc...
This paper considers the problem of allocating N indivisible objects among N agents according to the...
I study the problem of kidney exchange under strict ordinal preferences and with constraints on the ...
In barter exchanges, participants directly trade their endowed goods in a constrained economic setti...
In this dissertation, I study the properties of and propose the use of a family of random mechanisms...
I study kidney exchange with strict ordinal preferences and with constraints on the lengths of the e...
Balancing fairness and efficiency in resource allocation is a classical economic and computational p...
In barter-exchange markets, agents seek to swap their items with one another. These swaps consist of...
Kidney exchange programs, which allow a potential living donor whose kidney is incompatible with his...
We introduce and study the following exchange market mechanism problem without money: consider a set...
Kidney exchange provides a life-saving alternative to long waiting lists for patients in need of a n...
This paper experimentally studies an essential institutional feature of matching markets: Randomizat...
We present a credit-based matching mechanism for dynamic barter markets — and kidney exchange in par...
The privileged treatment for patients suffering from end-stage renal disease is transplantation. In ...
International audienceIn fair division of indivisible goods, using sequences of sincere choices (or ...