Election rules are formal processes that aggregate voters' preferences, typically to select a single winning candidate. Most of the election rules studied in the literature require the voters to rank the candidates from the most to the least preferred one. This method of eliciting preferences is impractical when the number of candidates to be ranked is large. We ask how well certain election rules (focusing on positional scoring rules and the Minimax rule) can be approximated from partial preferences collected through one of the following procedures: (i) randomized—we ask each voter to rank a random subset of ℓ candidates, and (ii) deterministic—we ask each voter to provide a ranking of her ℓ most preferred candidates (the ℓ-truncated ballo...
Instant runoff voting (IRV) is an increasingly-popular alternative to traditional plurality voting i...
The metric distortion framework posits that n voters and m candidates are jointly embedded in a metr...
In their groundbreaking paper, Bartholdi, Tovey and Trick [6] argued that many well-known voting rul...
The voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find the alternative closest to ...
To provide insight on various voting systems, we study six election methods using three categories o...
To provide insight on various voting systems, we study six election methods using three categories o...
International audienceWe study elections in which voters may submit partial ballots consisting of tr...
AbstractThe voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find an alternative clos...
We consider approval voting elections in which each voter votes for a (possibly empty) set of candid...
In multiagent settings where the agents have different pref-erences, preference aggregation is a cen...
In multiagent settings where the agents have di®erent preferences, preference aggregation is a cen-t...
We consider approval voting elections in which each voter votes for a (possibly empty) set of candid...
Abstract Given a fixed set of voter preferences, different candidates may win out-right given differ...
We study positional voting rules when candidates and voters are embedded in a common metric space, a...
International audienceWe compare the Condorcet Efficiencies of the plurality rule, the negative plur...
Instant runoff voting (IRV) is an increasingly-popular alternative to traditional plurality voting i...
The metric distortion framework posits that n voters and m candidates are jointly embedded in a metr...
In their groundbreaking paper, Bartholdi, Tovey and Trick [6] argued that many well-known voting rul...
The voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find the alternative closest to ...
To provide insight on various voting systems, we study six election methods using three categories o...
To provide insight on various voting systems, we study six election methods using three categories o...
International audienceWe study elections in which voters may submit partial ballots consisting of tr...
AbstractThe voting rules proposed by Dodgson and Young are both designed to find an alternative clos...
We consider approval voting elections in which each voter votes for a (possibly empty) set of candid...
In multiagent settings where the agents have different pref-erences, preference aggregation is a cen...
In multiagent settings where the agents have di®erent preferences, preference aggregation is a cen-t...
We consider approval voting elections in which each voter votes for a (possibly empty) set of candid...
Abstract Given a fixed set of voter preferences, different candidates may win out-right given differ...
We study positional voting rules when candidates and voters are embedded in a common metric space, a...
International audienceWe compare the Condorcet Efficiencies of the plurality rule, the negative plur...
Instant runoff voting (IRV) is an increasingly-popular alternative to traditional plurality voting i...
The metric distortion framework posits that n voters and m candidates are jointly embedded in a metr...
In their groundbreaking paper, Bartholdi, Tovey and Trick [6] argued that many well-known voting rul...