Authors
Maria Silvia Pini, Francesca Rossi, Kristen Brent Venable, Toby Walsh
Publication date
2009/6/1
Journal
Journal of Logic and Computation
Volume
19
Issue
3
Pages
475-502
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Preferences are not always expressible via complete linear orders: sometimes it is more natural to allow for the presence of incomparable outcomes. This may hold both in the agents' preference ordering and in the social order. In this article, we consider this scenario and study what properties it may have. In particular, we show that, despite the added expressivity and ability to resolve conflicts provided by incomparability, classical impossibility results (such as Arrow's theorem, Muller–Satterthwaite's theorem and Gibbard–Satterthwaite's theorem) still hold. We also prove some possibility results, generalizing Sen's theorem for majority voting. To prove these results, we define new notions of unanimity, monotonicity, dictator, triple-wise value-restriction and strategy-proofness, which are suitable and natural generalizations of the classical ones for complete orders.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MS Pini, F Rossi, KB Venable, T Walsh - Journal of Logic and Computation, 2009