Single-elimination tournaments (or knockout tournaments) are a popular format in sports competitions that is also widely used for decision making and elections. In this paper we study the algorithmic problem of manipulating the outcome of a tournament. More specifically, we study the problem of finding a seeding of the players such that a certain player wins the resulting tournament. The problem is known to be NP-hard in general. In this paper we present an algorithm for this problem that exploits structural restrictions on the tournament. More specifically, we establish that the problem is fixed-parameter tractable when parameterized by the size of a smallest feedback arc set of the tournament (interpreting the tournament as an oriented co...
AbstractComplementing recent progress on classical complexity and polynomial-time approximability of...
We study competitions structured as hierarchically shaped single-elimination tournaments. We define ...
A tournament is a directed graph in which there is a single arc between every pair of distinct verti...
A knockout (or single-elimination) tournament is a format of a competition that is very popular in p...
The agenda control problem for balanced single-elimination tournaments is the following natural prob...
A single-elimination (SE) tournament is a popular way to select a winner in both sports competitions...
We consider a very natural problem concerned with game manipulation. Let G be a directed graph where...
A single-elimination (SE) tournament is a popular way to select a winner both in sports competitions...
Balanced knockout tournaments are one of the most common formats for sports competitions, and are al...
Knockout tournaments are very common in practice for various settings such as sport events and seque...
Balanced knockout tournaments are one of the most common formats for sports competitions, and are al...
In this series of two papers we examine the classical problem of ranking a set of players on the bas...
We consider a very natural problem concerned with game manipulation. Let G be a directed graph where...
As various combinatorial optimization problems can be formulated as integer linear programs, polyhed...
This paper provides nested sets and vector representations of knockout tournaments. The paper introd...
AbstractComplementing recent progress on classical complexity and polynomial-time approximability of...
We study competitions structured as hierarchically shaped single-elimination tournaments. We define ...
A tournament is a directed graph in which there is a single arc between every pair of distinct verti...
A knockout (or single-elimination) tournament is a format of a competition that is very popular in p...
The agenda control problem for balanced single-elimination tournaments is the following natural prob...
A single-elimination (SE) tournament is a popular way to select a winner in both sports competitions...
We consider a very natural problem concerned with game manipulation. Let G be a directed graph where...
A single-elimination (SE) tournament is a popular way to select a winner both in sports competitions...
Balanced knockout tournaments are one of the most common formats for sports competitions, and are al...
Knockout tournaments are very common in practice for various settings such as sport events and seque...
Balanced knockout tournaments are one of the most common formats for sports competitions, and are al...
In this series of two papers we examine the classical problem of ranking a set of players on the bas...
We consider a very natural problem concerned with game manipulation. Let G be a directed graph where...
As various combinatorial optimization problems can be formulated as integer linear programs, polyhed...
This paper provides nested sets and vector representations of knockout tournaments. The paper introd...
AbstractComplementing recent progress on classical complexity and polynomial-time approximability of...
We study competitions structured as hierarchically shaped single-elimination tournaments. We define ...
A tournament is a directed graph in which there is a single arc between every pair of distinct verti...