Strategic abstention based on preference extensions: Positive results and computer-generated impossibilities

Florian Brandl, Felix Brandt, Christian Geist, Johannes Hofbauer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Voting rules allow multiple agents to aggregate their preferences in order to reach joint decisions. A common flaw of some voting rules, known as the no-show paradox, is that agents may obtain a more preferred outcome by abstaining from an election. We study strategic abstention for set-valued voting rules based on Kelly's and Fishburn's preference extensions. Our contribution is twofold. First, we show that, whenever there are at least five alternatives and seven agents, every Pareto-optimal majoritarian voting rule suffers from the no-show paradox with respect to Fishburn's extension. This is achieved by reducing the statement to a finite-yet very large-problem, which is encoded as a formula in propositional logic and then shown to be unsatisfiable by a SAT solver. We also provide a human-readable proof which we extracted from a minimal unsatisfiable core of the formula. Secondly, we prove that every voting rule that satisfies two natural conditions cannot be manipulated by strategic abstention with respect to Kelly's extension and give examples of well-known Pareto-optimal majoritarian voting rules that meet these requirements.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1031-1056
Number of pages26
JournalJournal of Artificial Intelligence Research
Volume66
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2019

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