Publication | Open Access
Truth, Justice, and Cake Cutting
45
Citations
9
References
2010
Year
EngineeringGame TheoryLawCriminal LawDominant Strategy TruthfulnessExperimental EconomicsAlgorithmic Mechanism DesignCombinatorial OptimizationMechanism DesignPost-truthJusticeFair Resource AllocationData PrivacyComputer ScienceFair DivisionCriminal JusticeCake CuttingAutomated ReasoningTransitional JusticeAlgorithmic FairnessBusinessEpistemic JusticeDecision ScienceInjusticeAlgorithmic Game TheorySocial Justice
Cake cutting is a common metaphor for the division of a heterogeneous divisible good. There are numerous papers that study the problem of fairly dividing a cake; a small number of them also take into account self-interested agents and consequent strategic issues, but these papers focus on fairness and consider a strikingly weak notion of truthfulness. In this paper we investigate the problem of cutting a cake in a way that is truthful and fair, where for the first time our notion of dominant strategy truthfulness is the ubiquitous one in social choice and computer science. We design both deterministic and randomized cake cutting algorithms that are truthful and fair under different assumptions with respect to the valuation functions of the agents.
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1990 | 3.1K | |
2001 | 1.3K | |
2005 | 479 | |
2000 | 366 | |
1996 | 254 | |
2009 | 75 | |
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