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Voting with partial information: what questions to ask?
20
Citations
13
References
2013
Year
EngineeringComputational Social ChoicePolitical BehaviorSmart VotingSocial SciencesInformation RetrievalData ScienceElectronic VotingPartial ProfilePartial InformationMechanism DesignPublic PolicyNecessary WinnersVote ElicitationVoting RuleComputer SciencePreference AggregationAutomated ReasoningPolitical ScienceSurvey Methodology
Voting is a way to aggregate individual voters' preferences. Traditionally a voter's preference is represented by a total order on the set of candidates. However, sometimes one may not have complete information about a voter's preference, and in this case, can only model a voter's preference as a partial order. Given this framework, there has been work on computing the possible and necessary winners of a (partial) profile. In this paper, we take a step further, look at sets of questions to ask in order to determine the outcome of such a partial profile. Specifically, we call a set of questions a deciding set for a candidate if the outcome of the vote for the candidate is determined no matter how the questions are answered by the voters, and a possible winning (losing) set if there is a way to answer these questions to make the candidate a winner (loser) of the vote. We discuss some interesting properties about these sets of queries, prove some complexity results about them under some well-known voting rules such as plurality and Borda, and consider their application in vote elicitation.
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