The typical paradigm in voting theory involves n voters and m candidates. Every voter ranks the candidates resulting in a permutation of the m candidates. A key problem is to derive the aggregate result of the voting. A popular method for vote aggregation is based on the Condorcet criterion. The Condorcet winner is the candidate who wins every other candidate by pairwise majority. However, the main disadvantage of this approach, known as the Condorcet paradox, is that such a winner does not necessarily exist since this criterion does not admit transitivity. This paradox is mathematically likely (if voters assign rankings uniformly at random, then with probability approaching one with the number of candidates, there will not be a...
The Condorcet Jury Theorem or the Miracle of Aggregation are frequently invoked to ensure the compet...
Some studies have recently examined the effect of closeness on the probability of observing the mono...
Classical results in social choice theory on the susceptibility of voting rules to strategic manipul...
The typical paradigm in voting theory involves n voters and m candidates. Every voter ranks the can...
We report in this note some results on the theoretical likelihood of Condorcet's Other Paradox in th...
Winner selection by majority, in elections between two candidates, is the only rule compatible with ...
This paper attacks a problem like the one addressed in an earlier work (Potthoff, 2013) but is more...
The Condorcet Jury Theorem states that given subjective expected utility maximization and common val...
The paper quantifies the amount of information aggregated by large elections under qualified majorit...
Among all existing paradoxes of voting, the one pointed out by Condorcet has managed to become known...
Voting paradoxes have played an important role in the theory of voting. They typically say very litt...
We investigate whether the simple plurality rule aggregates information efficiently in a large elect...
International audienceWe consider a general framework for voting systems with arbitrary types of bal...
This book argues that strange election outcomes should become less likely as voters' preferences bec...
AbstractA Condorcet voting procedure asks each voter to rank candidates in order of preference. Then...
The Condorcet Jury Theorem or the Miracle of Aggregation are frequently invoked to ensure the compet...
Some studies have recently examined the effect of closeness on the probability of observing the mono...
Classical results in social choice theory on the susceptibility of voting rules to strategic manipul...
The typical paradigm in voting theory involves n voters and m candidates. Every voter ranks the can...
We report in this note some results on the theoretical likelihood of Condorcet's Other Paradox in th...
Winner selection by majority, in elections between two candidates, is the only rule compatible with ...
This paper attacks a problem like the one addressed in an earlier work (Potthoff, 2013) but is more...
The Condorcet Jury Theorem states that given subjective expected utility maximization and common val...
The paper quantifies the amount of information aggregated by large elections under qualified majorit...
Among all existing paradoxes of voting, the one pointed out by Condorcet has managed to become known...
Voting paradoxes have played an important role in the theory of voting. They typically say very litt...
We investigate whether the simple plurality rule aggregates information efficiently in a large elect...
International audienceWe consider a general framework for voting systems with arbitrary types of bal...
This book argues that strange election outcomes should become less likely as voters' preferences bec...
AbstractA Condorcet voting procedure asks each voter to rank candidates in order of preference. Then...
The Condorcet Jury Theorem or the Miracle of Aggregation are frequently invoked to ensure the compet...
Some studies have recently examined the effect of closeness on the probability of observing the mono...
Classical results in social choice theory on the susceptibility of voting rules to strategic manipul...