From Arrow's Impossibility to Schwartz's Tournament Equilibrium Set

被引:0
作者
Brandt, Felix [1 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Munich, Inst Informat, D-80290 Munich, Germany
来源
RELATIONAL AND ALGEBRAIC METHODS IN COMPUTER SCIENCE | 2011年 / 6663卷
关键词
CHOICE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP301 [理论、方法];
学科分类号
081202 ;
摘要
Perhaps the most influential result in social choice theory is Arrow's impossibility theorem, which states that a seemingly modest set of desiderata cannot be satisfied when aggregating preferences [1]. While Arrow's theorem might appear rather negative, it can also be interpreted in a positive way by identifying what can be achieved in preference aggregation. In this talk, I present a number of variations of Arrow's (t)heorem-such as those due to Mas-Colell and Sonnenschein [8] and Blau and Deb [2]- in their choice-theoretic version. The critical condition in all these theorems is the assumption of a rationalizing binary relation or equivalent notions of choice-consistency. The bulk of my presentation contains three escape routes from these results. The first one is to ignore consistency with respect to a variable set of alternatives altogether and require consistency with respect to a variable electorate instead. As Smith [12] and Young [14] have famously shown, this essentially characterizes the class of scoring rules, which contains plurality and Borda's rule. For the second escape route, we factorize choice-consistency into two parts, contraction-consistency and expansions-consistency [11]. While even the mildest dose of the former has severe consequences on the possibility of choice, varying degrees of the latter characterize a number of appealing social choice functions, namely the top cycle, the uncovered set, and the Banks set [3,9,4]. Finally, I suggest to redefine choice-consistency by making reference to the set of chosen alternatives rather than individual chosen alternatives [6]. It turns out that the resulting condition is a weakening of transitive rationalizability and can be used to characterize the minimal covering set and the bipartisan set. Based on a two decades-old conjecture due to Schwartz [10], the tournament equilibrium set can be characterized by the same condition or, alternatively, by a weak expansion-consistency condition from the second escape route. Whether Schwartz's conjecture actually holds remains a challenging combinatorial problem as well as one of the enigmatic open problems of social choice theory. Throughout the presentation I will discuss the algorithmic aspects of all considered social choice functions. While some of the mentioned functions can be easily computed, other ones do not admit an efficient algorithm unless P equals NP [13,5,7].
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页码:50 / 51
页数:2
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