We report in this note some results on the theoretical likelihood of Condorcet's Other Paradox in three alternative elections. This paradox occurs when we have a voting situation such that no Wheighted Scoring Rule (WSR) will select the Pairwise Majority Rule Winner as the WSR winner. We conclude from our study that actual observances of Condorcet's Other Paradox should be very rare events.Social Choice, Voting paradoxes, Scoring rules, Majority rule, Probability
The Condorcet winner in an election is the candidate who would be able to defeat all other candidate...
The organization of US presidential elections make them potentially vulnerable to so-called “voting ...
International audienceFor a given voting situation, the Strong Borda Paradox occurs when a Condorcet...
International audienceWe report in this note some results on the theoretical likelihood of Condorcet...
Consider a group of individuals who have to collectively choose an outcome from a finite set of feas...
Voting paradoxes have played an important role in the theory of voting. They typically say very litt...
Condorcet’s paradox occurs when there is no alternative that beats every other alternative by majori...
We provide intuitive, formal, and computational evidence that in a large society Condorcet's paradox...
Some studies have recently examined the effect of closeness on the probability of observing the mono...
This book argues that strange election outcomes should become less likely as voters' preferences bec...
We consider two no-show paradoxes, in which a voter obtains a preferable outcome by abstaining from ...
The goal of this paper is to propose a comparison of four multi-winner voting rules, k-Plurality, k-...
International audienceThe Condorcet winner in an election is the candidate who would be able to defe...
More and more results from social choice theory are used to argue about collective decision making i...
The No Show Paradox (there is a voter who would rather not vote) is known to affect every Condorcet ...
The Condorcet winner in an election is the candidate who would be able to defeat all other candidate...
The organization of US presidential elections make them potentially vulnerable to so-called “voting ...
International audienceFor a given voting situation, the Strong Borda Paradox occurs when a Condorcet...
International audienceWe report in this note some results on the theoretical likelihood of Condorcet...
Consider a group of individuals who have to collectively choose an outcome from a finite set of feas...
Voting paradoxes have played an important role in the theory of voting. They typically say very litt...
Condorcet’s paradox occurs when there is no alternative that beats every other alternative by majori...
We provide intuitive, formal, and computational evidence that in a large society Condorcet's paradox...
Some studies have recently examined the effect of closeness on the probability of observing the mono...
This book argues that strange election outcomes should become less likely as voters' preferences bec...
We consider two no-show paradoxes, in which a voter obtains a preferable outcome by abstaining from ...
The goal of this paper is to propose a comparison of four multi-winner voting rules, k-Plurality, k-...
International audienceThe Condorcet winner in an election is the candidate who would be able to defe...
More and more results from social choice theory are used to argue about collective decision making i...
The No Show Paradox (there is a voter who would rather not vote) is known to affect every Condorcet ...
The Condorcet winner in an election is the candidate who would be able to defeat all other candidate...
The organization of US presidential elections make them potentially vulnerable to so-called “voting ...
International audienceFor a given voting situation, the Strong Borda Paradox occurs when a Condorcet...