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AAMAS 2019

Testing Preferential Domains using Sampling

Conference Paper 3D: Social Choice Theory 2 Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems

Abstract

A preferential domain is a collection of sets of preferences which are linear orders over a set of alternatives. These domains have been studied extensively in social choice theory due to both its practical importance and theoretical elegance. Examples of some extensively studied preferential domains include single peaked, single crossing, Euclidean, etc. In this paper, we study the sample complexity of testing whether a given preference profile is close to some specific domain. We consider two notions of closeness: (a) closeness via preferences, and (b) closeness via alternatives. We further explore the effect of assuming that the outlier preferences/alternatives to be random (instead of arbitrary) on the sample complexity of the testing problem. In most cases, we show that the above testing problem can be solved with high probability for all commonly used domains by observing only a small number of samples (independent of the number of preferences, n, and often the number of alternatives, m). In the remaining few cases, we prove either impossibility results or Ω(n) lower bound on the sample complexity. We complement our theoretical findings with extensive simulations to figure out the actual constant factors of our asymptotic sample complexity bounds.

Authors

Keywords

  • Computational social choice
  • preferential domain
  • sampling
  • algorithms
  • testing
  • almost single peak
  • almost single crossing

Context

Venue
International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems
Archive span
2002-2025
Indexed papers
7403
Paper id
919994854370429679