We consider the one-sided matching problem, where n agents have preferences over n items, and these preferences are induced by underlying cardinal valuation functions. The goal is to match every agent to a single item so as to maximize the social welfare. Most of the related literature, however, assumes that the values of the agents are not a priori known, and only access to the ordinal preferences of the agents over the items is provided. Consequently, this incomplete information leads to loss of efficiency, which is measured by the notion of distortion. In this paper, we further assume that the agents can answer a small number of queries, allowing us partial ac- cess to their values. We study the interplay between elicited cardinal inform...
The traditional model of two-sided matching assumes that all agents fully know their own preferences...
We consider the problem of matching one kind of agent with another, e.g. marriageable men and women,...
In this paper we apply the instrumental approach to social preferences in order to distinguish among...
We consider the one-sided matching problem, where n agents have preferences over n items, and these ...
In most social choice settings, the participating agents are typically required to express their pre...
The notion of distortion was introduced by Procaccia and Rosenschein (2006) to quantify the ineffici...
Aggregating the preferences of individuals into a collective decision is the core subject of study o...
We study the problem of approximate social welfare maximization (without money) in one-sided matchin...
We study the problem of approximate social welfare maximization (without money) in onesided matching...
Mechanisms which implement stable matchings are often observed to work well in practice, even in env...
This thesis is divided into three chapters. In the first chapter, I study the use of an alternative ...
Abstract We formulate a notion of stable outcomes in matching problems with one-sided asymmetric inf...
We study the Maximum Weighted Matching problem in a partial information setting where the agents' ut...
A large literature uses matching models to analyze markets with two-sided heterogeneity, studying pr...
We study two-sided markets with heterogeneous, privately informed agents who gain from being matched...
The traditional model of two-sided matching assumes that all agents fully know their own preferences...
We consider the problem of matching one kind of agent with another, e.g. marriageable men and women,...
In this paper we apply the instrumental approach to social preferences in order to distinguish among...
We consider the one-sided matching problem, where n agents have preferences over n items, and these ...
In most social choice settings, the participating agents are typically required to express their pre...
The notion of distortion was introduced by Procaccia and Rosenschein (2006) to quantify the ineffici...
Aggregating the preferences of individuals into a collective decision is the core subject of study o...
We study the problem of approximate social welfare maximization (without money) in one-sided matchin...
We study the problem of approximate social welfare maximization (without money) in onesided matching...
Mechanisms which implement stable matchings are often observed to work well in practice, even in env...
This thesis is divided into three chapters. In the first chapter, I study the use of an alternative ...
Abstract We formulate a notion of stable outcomes in matching problems with one-sided asymmetric inf...
We study the Maximum Weighted Matching problem in a partial information setting where the agents' ut...
A large literature uses matching models to analyze markets with two-sided heterogeneity, studying pr...
We study two-sided markets with heterogeneous, privately informed agents who gain from being matched...
The traditional model of two-sided matching assumes that all agents fully know their own preferences...
We consider the problem of matching one kind of agent with another, e.g. marriageable men and women,...
In this paper we apply the instrumental approach to social preferences in order to distinguish among...