We introduce a new family of judgment aggregation rules, called the binomial rules, designed to account for hidden dependencies between some of the issues being judged. To place them within the landscape of judgment aggregation rules, we analyse both their axiomatic properties and their computational complexity, and we show that they contain both the well-known distance-based rule and the basic rule returning the most frequent overall judgment as special cases. To evaluate the performance of our rules empirically, we apply them to a dataset of crowdsourced judgments regarding the quality of hotels extracted from the travel website TripAdvisor. In our experiments we distinguish between the full dataset and a subset of highly polarised judgme...
The aggregation of consistent individual judgments on logically interconnected propositions into a c...
In this paper we analyze judgement aggregation problems in which a group of agents independently vot...
International audienceThe present notes serve as material for the course Introduction to Judgment Ag...
We introduce a new family of judgment aggregation rules, called the binomial rules, designed to acco...
Many voting rules are based on some minimization principle. Likewise, in the field of logic-based kn...
Many voting rules are based on minimization or maximization principle. Like-wise, in the field of lo...
International audienceSeveral recent articles have studied judgment aggregation rules under the poin...
International audienceThis paper introduces a new class of judgment aggregation rules, to be called ...
We analyse the computational complexity of three problems in judgment aggregation: (1) computing a c...
Judgment aggregation is an abstract framework for studying collective decision making by aggregating...
We provide a comprehensive analysis of the computational complexity of the outcome determination pro...
The new field of judgment aggregation aims to merge many individual sets of judgments on logically i...
peer reviewedMany voting rules are based on some minimization principle. Likewise, in the field of l...
The new field of judgment aggregation aims to merge many individual sets of judgments on logically i...
The aggregation of consistent individual judgments on logically interconnected propositions into a c...
The aggregation of consistent individual judgments on logically interconnected propositions into a c...
In this paper we analyze judgement aggregation problems in which a group of agents independently vot...
International audienceThe present notes serve as material for the course Introduction to Judgment Ag...
We introduce a new family of judgment aggregation rules, called the binomial rules, designed to acco...
Many voting rules are based on some minimization principle. Likewise, in the field of logic-based kn...
Many voting rules are based on minimization or maximization principle. Like-wise, in the field of lo...
International audienceSeveral recent articles have studied judgment aggregation rules under the poin...
International audienceThis paper introduces a new class of judgment aggregation rules, to be called ...
We analyse the computational complexity of three problems in judgment aggregation: (1) computing a c...
Judgment aggregation is an abstract framework for studying collective decision making by aggregating...
We provide a comprehensive analysis of the computational complexity of the outcome determination pro...
The new field of judgment aggregation aims to merge many individual sets of judgments on logically i...
peer reviewedMany voting rules are based on some minimization principle. Likewise, in the field of l...
The new field of judgment aggregation aims to merge many individual sets of judgments on logically i...
The aggregation of consistent individual judgments on logically interconnected propositions into a c...
The aggregation of consistent individual judgments on logically interconnected propositions into a c...
In this paper we analyze judgement aggregation problems in which a group of agents independently vot...
International audienceThe present notes serve as material for the course Introduction to Judgment Ag...