We study the problem of fairly allocating a divisible resource, also known as cake cutting, with an additional requirement that the shares that different agents receive should be sufficiently separated from one another. This captures, for example, constraints arising from social distancing guidelines. While it is sometimes impossible to allocate a proportional share to every agent under the separation requirement, we show that the well-known criterion of maximin share fairness can always be attained. We then provide algorithmic analysis of maximin share fairness in this setting—for instance, the maximin share of an agent cannot be computed exactly by any finite algorithm, but can be approximated with an arbitrarily small error. In addition,...
We study the problem of fairly dividing a heterogeneous resource, commonly known as cake cutting and...
How should one allocate scarce resources among a group of people in a satisfactory manner when the p...
Fair division problems have been vastly studied in the past 60 years. This line of research was init...
We study the problem of fairly allocating a divisible resource, also known as cake cutting, with an ...
We study the fair allocation of a cake, which serves as a metaphor for a divisible resource, under t...
We study the fair allocation of a cake, which serves as a metaphor for a divisible resource, under t...
We study the fair allocation of a cake, which serves as a metaphor for a divisible resource, under t...
We introduce the simultaneous model for cake cutting (the fair allocation of a divisible good), in w...
We consider the problem of fairly dividing a heterogeneous divisible good among agents with differen...
Procedures to divide a cake among n people with n-1 cuts (the minimum number) are analyzed and compa...
We study the problem of fair division of a heterogeneous resource among strategic players. Given a d...
Procedures to divide a cake among n people with n-1 cuts (the minimum number) are analyzed and compa...
For decades researchers have struggled with the problem of envy-free cake cutting: how to divide a d...
Resource allocation aims at allocating scarce resources to strategic agents in an efficient and fair...
We describe a 3-person, 2-cut envy-free cake-cutting algorithm, inspired by a continuous moving-knif...
We study the problem of fairly dividing a heterogeneous resource, commonly known as cake cutting and...
How should one allocate scarce resources among a group of people in a satisfactory manner when the p...
Fair division problems have been vastly studied in the past 60 years. This line of research was init...
We study the problem of fairly allocating a divisible resource, also known as cake cutting, with an ...
We study the fair allocation of a cake, which serves as a metaphor for a divisible resource, under t...
We study the fair allocation of a cake, which serves as a metaphor for a divisible resource, under t...
We study the fair allocation of a cake, which serves as a metaphor for a divisible resource, under t...
We introduce the simultaneous model for cake cutting (the fair allocation of a divisible good), in w...
We consider the problem of fairly dividing a heterogeneous divisible good among agents with differen...
Procedures to divide a cake among n people with n-1 cuts (the minimum number) are analyzed and compa...
We study the problem of fair division of a heterogeneous resource among strategic players. Given a d...
Procedures to divide a cake among n people with n-1 cuts (the minimum number) are analyzed and compa...
For decades researchers have struggled with the problem of envy-free cake cutting: how to divide a d...
Resource allocation aims at allocating scarce resources to strategic agents in an efficient and fair...
We describe a 3-person, 2-cut envy-free cake-cutting algorithm, inspired by a continuous moving-knif...
We study the problem of fairly dividing a heterogeneous resource, commonly known as cake cutting and...
How should one allocate scarce resources among a group of people in a satisfactory manner when the p...
Fair division problems have been vastly studied in the past 60 years. This line of research was init...