Arrow Research search
Back to AAMAS

AAMAS 2018

High-Multiplicity Election Problems

Conference Paper Session 43: Social Choice Theory 3 Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems

Abstract

The computational study of elections generally assumes that the preferences of the electorate come in as a list of votes. Depending on the context, it may be much more natural to represent the list succinctly, as the distinct votes of the electorate and their counts, i. e. , high-multiplicity representation. We consider how this representation affects the complexity of election problems. High-multiplicity representation may be exponentially smaller than standard representation, and so many polynomial-time algorithms for election problems in standard representation become exponential-time. Surprisingly, for polynomial-time election problems, we are often able to either adapt the same approach or provide new algorithms to show that these problems remain polynomial-time in the highmultiplicity case; this is in sharp contrast to the case where each voter has a weight, where the complexity usually increases. In the process we explore the relationship between high-multiplicity scheduling and manipulation of high-multiplicity elections. And we show that for any fixed set of job lengths, high-multiplicity scheduling on uniform parallel machines is in P, which was previously known for only two job lengths. We did not find any natural case where a polynomial-time election problem does not remain in P when moving to high-multiplicity representation. However, we found one natural NP-hard election problem where the complexity does increase, namely winner determination for Kemeny elections.

Authors

Keywords

No keywords are indexed for this paper.

Context

Venue
International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems
Archive span
2002-2025
Indexed papers
7403
Paper id
62038087829348356