Anyone but him: The complexity of precluding an alternative

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摘要

Preference aggregation in a multiagent setting is a central issue in both human and computer contexts. In this paper, we study in terms of complexity the vulnerability of preference aggregation to destructive control. In particular, we study the ability of an election's chair to, through such mechanisms as voter/candidate addition/suppression/partition, ensure that a particular candidate (equivalently, alternative) does not win. And we study the extent to which election systems can make it impossible, or computationally costly (NP-complete), for the chair to execute such control. Among the systems we study—plurality, Condorcet, and approval voting—we find cases where systems immune or computationally resistant to a chair choosing the winner nonetheless are vulnerable to the chair blocking a victory. Beyond that, we see that among our studied systems no one system offers the best protection against destructive control. Rather, the choice of a preference aggregation system will depend closely on which types of control one wishes to be protected against. We also find concrete cases where the complexity of or susceptibility to control varies dramatically based on the choice among natural tie-handling rules.

论文关键词:Approval voting,Computational complexity,Computational resistance,Condorcet voting,Destructive control,Election systems,Plurality voting,Preference aggregation,Multiagent systems,Vote suppression

论文评审过程:Received 1 February 2006, Revised 18 January 2007, Accepted 29 January 2007, Available online 7 February 2007.

论文官网地址:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artint.2007.01.005