The Optimal Size of an Epistemic Congress

07/02/2021
by   Manon Revel, et al.
0

We analyze the optimal size of a congress in a representative democracy. We take an epistemic view where voters decide on a binary issue with one ground truth outcome, and each voter votes correctly according to their competence levels in [0, 1]. Assuming that we can sample the best experts to form an epistemic congress, we find that the optimal congress size should be linear in the population size. This result is striking because it holds even when allowing the top representatives to be accurate with arbitrarily high probabilities. We then analyze real world data, finding that the actual sizes of congresses are much smaller than the optimal size our theoretical results suggest. We conclude by analyzing under what conditions congresses of sub-optimal sizes would still outperform direct democracy, in which all voters vote.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
01/17/2022

Multi-winner Approval Voting Goes Epistemic

Epistemic voting interprets votes as noisy signals about a ground truth....
research
07/25/2021

In Defense of Fluid Democracy

Fluid democracy is a voting paradigm that allows voters to choose betwee...
research
01/12/2022

Consensus between Epistemic Agents is Difficult

We introduce an epistemic information measure between two data streams, ...
research
04/21/2023

Epistemic Selection of Costly Alternatives: The Case of Participatory Budgeting

We initiate the study of voting rules for participatory budgeting using ...
research
10/15/2022

Comment: The Essential Role of Policy Evaluation for the 2020 Census Disclosure Avoidance System

In "Differential Perspectives: Epistemic Disconnects Surrounding the US ...
research
09/07/2019

A dynamic epistemic logic analysis of the equality negation task

In this paper we study the solvability of the equality negation task in ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset