Obvious Manipulability of Voting Rules

11/03/2021
by   Haris Aziz, et al.
0

The Gibbard-Satterthwaite theorem states that no unanimous and non-dictatorial voting rule is strategyproof. We revisit voting rules and consider a weaker notion of strategyproofness called not obvious manipulability that was proposed by Troyan and Morrill (2020). We identify several classes of voting rules that satisfy this notion. We also show that several voting rules including k-approval fail to satisfy this property. We characterize conditions under which voting rules are obviously manipulable. One of our insights is that certain rules are obviously manipulable when the number of alternatives is relatively large compared to the number of voters. In contrast to the Gibbard-Satterthwaite theorem, many of the rules we examined are not obviously manipulable. This reflects the relatively easier satisfiability of the notion and the zero information assumption of not obvious manipulability, as opposed to the perfect information assumption of strategyproofness. We also present algorithmic results for computing obvious manipulations and report on experiments.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
12/20/2021

Axiomatic characterizations of consistent approval-based committee choice rules

We prove axiomatic characterizations of several important multiwinner ru...
research
11/23/2022

Approval-Based Voting with Mixed Goods

We consider a voting scenario in which the resource to be voted upon may...
research
12/13/2021

Robust Voting Rules from Algorithmic Robust Statistics

In this work we study the problem of robustly learning a Mallows model. ...
research
05/30/2022

Fair and Fast Tie-Breaking for Voting

We introduce a notion of fairest tie-breaking for voting w.r.t. two wide...
research
04/30/2021

Perpetual Voting: The Axiomatic Lens

Perpetual voting was recently introduced as a framework for long-term co...
research
07/03/2023

Anonymous and Copy-Robust Delegations for Liquid Democracy

Liquid democracy with ranked delegations is a novel voting scheme that u...
research
07/27/2017

Condorcet's Principle and the Preference Reversal Paradox

We prove that every Condorcet-consistent voting rule can be manipulated ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset