Aggregating the preferences of individuals into a collective decision is the core subject of study of social choice theory. In 2006, Procaccia and Rosenschein considered a utilitarian social choice setting, where the agents have explicit numerical values for the alternatives, yet they only report their linear orderings over them. To compare different aggregation mechanisms, Procaccia and Rosenschein introduced the notion of distortion, which quantifies the inefficiency of using only ordinal information when trying to maximize the social welfare, i.e., the sum of the underlying values of the agents for the chosen outcome. Since then, this research area has flourished and bounds on the distortion have been obtained for a wide variety of funda...
In this paper, we report on a series of free-form bargaining experiments in which two players have t...
In utilitarian social choice settings, agents have cardinal utilities over candidates, while for man...
We consider a social choice setting with agents that are partitioned into disjoint groups, and have ...
Aggregating the preferences of individuals into a collective decision is the core subject of study o...
A voting mechanism is a method for preference aggregation that takes as input preferences over alter...
In most social choice settings, the participating agents are typically required to express their pre...
Social choice theory is concerned with aggregating the preferences of agents into a single outcome. ...
We study social choice mechanisms in an implicit utilitarian framework with a metric constraint, whe...
The notion of distortion in social choice problems has been defined to measure the loss in efficienc...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
We consider the one-sided matching problem, where n agents have preferences over n items, and these ...
By taking sets of utility functions as a primitive description of agents, we define an ordering over ...
We investigate how individuals think groups should aggregate members’ ordinal preferences – that is,...
We consider the one-sided matching problem, where n agents have preferences over n items, and these ...
In this paper, we report on a series of free-form bargaining experiments in which two players have t...
In utilitarian social choice settings, agents have cardinal utilities over candidates, while for man...
We consider a social choice setting with agents that are partitioned into disjoint groups, and have ...
Aggregating the preferences of individuals into a collective decision is the core subject of study o...
A voting mechanism is a method for preference aggregation that takes as input preferences over alter...
In most social choice settings, the participating agents are typically required to express their pre...
Social choice theory is concerned with aggregating the preferences of agents into a single outcome. ...
We study social choice mechanisms in an implicit utilitarian framework with a metric constraint, whe...
The notion of distortion in social choice problems has been defined to measure the loss in efficienc...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
We examine the quality of social choice mechanisms using a utilitarian view, in which all of the age...
We consider the one-sided matching problem, where n agents have preferences over n items, and these ...
By taking sets of utility functions as a primitive description of agents, we define an ordering over ...
We investigate how individuals think groups should aggregate members’ ordinal preferences – that is,...
We consider the one-sided matching problem, where n agents have preferences over n items, and these ...
In this paper, we report on a series of free-form bargaining experiments in which two players have t...
In utilitarian social choice settings, agents have cardinal utilities over candidates, while for man...
We consider a social choice setting with agents that are partitioned into disjoint groups, and have ...