If voters' preferences are one-dimensional, many hard problems in computational social choice become tractable. A preference profile can be classified as one-dimensional if it has the single-crossing property, which requires that the voters can be ordered from left to right so that their preferences are consistent with this order. In practice, preferences may exhibit some one-dimensional structure, despite not being single-crossing in the formal sense. Hence, we ask whether one can identify preference profiles that are close to being single-crossing. We consider three distance measures, which are based on partitioning voters or candidates or performing a small number of swaps in each vote. We prove that it can be efficiently decided if vote...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
Structured preference domains, such as, for example, the do-mains of single-peaked and single-crossi...
We study the complexity of deciding if a given profile of incomplete votes (i.e., a profile of parti...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
Structured preference domains, such as, for example, the domains of single-peaked and single-crossin...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
Structured preference domains, such as, for example, the do-mains of single-peaked and single-crossi...
We study the complexity of deciding if a given profile of incomplete votes (i.e., a profile of parti...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We characterize single-crossing preference profiles in terms of two forbidden substructures, one of ...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
Structured preference domains, such as, for example, the domains of single-peaked and single-crossin...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
We investigate the problem of deciding whether a given preference profile is close to having a certa...
Structured preference domains, such as, for example, the do-mains of single-peaked and single-crossi...