To design social choice mechanisms with desirable utility properties, normative properties, and low sample complexity, we propose a new randomized mechanism called 2-Agree. This mechanism asks random voters for their top alternatives until at least two voters agree, at which point it selects that alternative as the winner. We prove that, despite its simplicity and low sample complexity, 2-Agree achieves almost optimal distortion on a metric space when the number of alternatives is not large, and satisfies anonymity, neutrality, ex-post Pareto efficiency, very strong SD-participation, and is approximately truthful. We further show that 2-Agree works well for larger number of alternatives with decisive agents
Can we devise mechanisms that allow voters to express the intensity of their preferences when moneta...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
We study optimal dynamic voting procedures when voting is costly. For a highly stylized specificatio...
We study social choice mechanisms in an implicit utilitarian framework with a metric constraint, whe...
In distortion-based analysis of social choice rules over metric spaces, voters and candidates are jo...
Mechanisms for aggregating the preferences of agents in elections need to balance many different con...
In cooperative multiagent systems an alternative that maximizes the social welfare — the sum o...
The traditional axiomatic approach to voting is motivated by the problem of reconciling differences ...
Social decision schemes (SDSs) map the ordinal preferences of individual voters over multiple altern...
We investigate implementation of social choice functions as mappings from states to lotteries under ...
In Conflict Resolution situations where two parties with opposed preferences need to make a number o...
We derive the incentive compatible and ex-ante welfare maximizing (i.e., utilitarian) mechanism for ...
We investigate two-winner election problem seeking to minimize the social cost. We are interested in...
In Conflict Resolution situations where two parties with opposed preferences need to make a number o...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
Can we devise mechanisms that allow voters to express the intensity of their preferences when moneta...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
We study optimal dynamic voting procedures when voting is costly. For a highly stylized specificatio...
We study social choice mechanisms in an implicit utilitarian framework with a metric constraint, whe...
In distortion-based analysis of social choice rules over metric spaces, voters and candidates are jo...
Mechanisms for aggregating the preferences of agents in elections need to balance many different con...
In cooperative multiagent systems an alternative that maximizes the social welfare — the sum o...
The traditional axiomatic approach to voting is motivated by the problem of reconciling differences ...
Social decision schemes (SDSs) map the ordinal preferences of individual voters over multiple altern...
We investigate implementation of social choice functions as mappings from states to lotteries under ...
In Conflict Resolution situations where two parties with opposed preferences need to make a number o...
We derive the incentive compatible and ex-ante welfare maximizing (i.e., utilitarian) mechanism for ...
We investigate two-winner election problem seeking to minimize the social cost. We are interested in...
In Conflict Resolution situations where two parties with opposed preferences need to make a number o...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
Can we devise mechanisms that allow voters to express the intensity of their preferences when moneta...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
We study optimal dynamic voting procedures when voting is costly. For a highly stylized specificatio...