Popular Branchings and Their Dual Certificates

12/04/2019
by   Telikepalli Kavitha, et al.
0

Let G be a digraph where every node has preferences over its incoming edges. The preferences of a node extend naturally to preferences over branchings, i.e., directed forests; a branching B is popular if B does not lose a head-to-head election (where nodes cast votes) against any branching. Such popular branchings have a natural application in liquid democracy. The popular branching problem is to decide if G admits a popular branching or not. We give a characterization of popular branchings in terms of dual certificates and use this characterization to design an efficient combinatorial algorithm for the popular branching problem. When preferences are weak rankings, we use our characterization to formulate the popular branching polytope in the original space and also show that our algorithm can be modified to compute a branching with least unpopularity margin. When preferences are strict rankings, we show that "approximately popular" branchings always exist.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
10/21/2021

The popular assignment problem: when cardinality is more important than popularity

We consider a matching problem in a bipartite graph G=(A∪ B,E) where eac...
research
11/06/2020

Maximum Matchings and Popularity

Let G be a bipartite graph where every node has a strict ranking of its ...
research
05/04/2022

Maximum-utility popular matchings with bounded instability

In a graph where vertices have preferences over their neighbors, a match...
research
06/24/2022

Popular Critical Matchings in the Many-to-Many Setting

We consider the many-to-many bipartite matching problem in the presence ...
research
11/16/2018

Popularity, stability, and the dominant matching polytope

Let G = (A ∪ B, E) be an instance of the stable marriage problem with st...
research
12/07/2022

Recognizing when a preference system is close to admitting a master list

A preference system ℐ is an undirected graph where vertices have prefere...
research
11/29/2013

Top-k Query Answering in Datalog+/- Ontologies under Subjective Reports (Technical Report)

The use of preferences in query answering, both in traditional databases...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset