AGH Univesity of Science and Technology
What Do Multiwinner Voting Rules Do? An Experiment Over the Two-Dimensional Euclidean Domain
Elkind, Edith (University of Oxford) | Faliszewski, Piotr (AGH Univesity of Science and Technology) | Laslier, Jean-Francois (Paris School of Economics) | Skowron, Piotr (University of Oxford) | Slinko, Arkadii (University of Auckland) | Talmon, Nimrod (Weizmann Institute of Science)
We visualize aggregate outputs of popular multiwinner voting rules — SNTV, STV, Bloc, k-Borda, Monroe, Chamberlin–Courant, and PAV — for elections generated according to the two-dimensional Euclidean model. We consider three applications of multiwinner voting, namely, parliamentary elections, portfolio/movie selection, and shortlisting, and use our results to understand which of our rules seem to be best suited for each application. In particular, we show that STV (one of the few nontrivial rules used in real high-stake elections) exhibits excellent performance, whereas the Bloc rule (also often used in practice) performs poorly.
Multiwinner Analogues of the Plurality Rule: Axiomatic and Algorithmic Perspectives
Faliszewski, Piotr (AGH Univesity of Science and Technology) | Skowron, Piot (University of Oxford) | Slinko, Arkadii (University of Auckland) | Talmon, Nimrod (Technische Universitaet Berlin)
We characterize the class of committee scoring rules that satisfy the fixed-majority criterion. In some sense, the committee scoring rules in this class are multiwinner analogues of the single-winner Plurality rule, which is uniquely characterized as the only single-winner scoring rule that satisfies the simple majority criterion. We find that, for most of the rules in our new class, the complexity of winner determination is high (i.e., the problem of computing the winners is NP-hard), but we also show some examples of polynomial-time winner determination procedures, exact and approximate.
Possible Winners in Noisy Elections
Wojtas, Krzysztof (AGH University of Science and Technology) | Faliszewski, Piotr (AGH Univesity of Science and Technology)
We consider the problem of predicting winners in elections given complete knowledge about all possible candidates, all possible voters (together with their preferences), but in the case where it is uncertain either which candidates exactly register for the election or which voters cast their votes. Under reasonable assumptions our problems reduce to counting variants of election control problems. We either give polynomial-time algorithms or prove #P-completeness results for counting variants of control by adding/deleting candidates/voters for Plurality, k -Approval, Approval, Condorcet, and Maximin voting rules.
Campaign Management under Approval-Driven Voting Rules
Schlotter, Ildiko (Budapest University of Technology and Economics) | Faliszewski, Piotr (AGH Univesity of Science and Technology) | Elkind, Edith (Nanyang Technological University)
Approval-like voting rules, such as Sincere-Strategy Preference-Based Approval voting (SP-AV), the Bucklin rule (an adaptive variant of k-Approval voting), and the Fallback rule (an adaptive variant of SP-AV) have many desirable properties: for example, they are easy to understand and encourage the candidates to choose electoral platforms that have a broad appeal. In this paper, we investigate both classic and parameterized computational complexity of electoral campaign management under such rules. We focus on two methods that can be used to promote a given candidate: asking voters to move this candidate upwards in their preference order or asking them to change the number of candidates they approve of. We show that finding an optimal campaign management strategy of the first type is easy for both Bucklin and Fallback. In contrast, the second method is computationally hard even if the degree to which we need to affect the votes is small. Nevertheless, we identify a large class of scenarios that admit a fixed-parameter tractable algorithm.
Good Rationalizations of Voting Rules
Elkind, Edith (Nanyang Technological University) | Faliszewski, Piotr (AGH Univesity of Science and Technology) | Slinko, Arkadii (Univeristy of Auckland)
We explore the relationship between two approaches to rationalizing voting rules: the maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) framework originally suggested by Condorcet and recently studied by Conitzer, Rognlie, and Xia, and the distance rationalizability (DR) framework of Elkind, Faliszewski, and Slinko. The former views voting as an attempt to reconstruct the correct ordering of the candidates given noisy estimates (i.e., votes), while the latter explains voting as search for the nearest consensus outcome. We provide conditions under which an MLE interpretation of a voting rule coincides with its DR interpretation, and classify a number of classic voting rules, such as Kemeny, Plurality, Borda and Single Transferable Vote (STV), according to how well they fit each of these frameworks. The classification we obtain is more precise than the ones that result from using MLE or DR alone: indeed, we show that the MLE approach can be used to guide our search for a more refined notion of distance rationalizability and vice versa.
Probabilistic Possible Winner Determination
Bachrach, Yoram (Microsoft Research Ltd.) | Betzler, Nadja (Friedrich-Schiller-Universitaet Jena) | Faliszewski, Piotr (AGH Univesity of Science and Technology)
We study the computational complexity of the counting version of the Possible-Winner problem for elections. In the Possible-Winner problem we are given a profile of voters, each with a partial preference order, and ask if there are linear extensions of the votes such that a designated candidate wins. We also analyze a special case of Possible-Winner, the Manipulation problem. We provide polynomial-time algorithms for counting manipulations in a class of scoring protocols and in several other voting rules. We show #P-hardness of the counting variant of Possible-Winner for plurality and veto and give a simple yet general and practically useful randomized algorithm for a variant of Possible-Winner for all voting rules for which a winner can be computed in polynomial time.
Cloning in Elections
Elkind, Edith (Nanyang Technological University) | Faliszewski, Piotr (AGH Univesity of Science and Technology) | Slinko, Arkadii (Univeristy of Auckland)
We consider the problem of manipulating elections via cloning candidates. In our model, a manipulator can replace each candidate c by one or more clones, i.e., new candidates that are so similar to c that each voter simply replaces c in his vote with the block of c 's clones. The outcome of the resulting election may then depend on how each voter orders the clones within the block. We formalize what it means for a cloning manipulation to be successful (which turns out to be a surprisingly delicate issue), and, for a number of prominent voting rules, characterize the preference profiles for which a successful cloning manipulation exists. We also consider the model where there is a cost associated with producing each clone, and study the complexity of finding a minimum-cost cloning manipulation. Finally, we compare cloning with the related problem of control via adding candidates.