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VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland
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VOTING Satisfaction and justice in voting outcomes is important Every day, somebody is rackin ’ and stackin ’ Voting is a way to reach equitable consensus
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PARADOXES OCCUR 1992 ELECTION –Bush and Poirot win popular election 2000 Election –Bush II loses popular vote, wins election They happen every day in the rack/stack method used in DoD
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ASSUMPTIONS Equal Weight One Vote Each Independence (no gaming) Transitivity (A < B and B < C implies A < C) DEFN: An Alternative is one of the choices NOTATION: a > b means a is prefered to b
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PREFERENCE PROFILE COUNT342756 1 ST ABCABC 2 ND BCACAB 3 RD CABBCA
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WHO WINS?
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TOURNAMENT MATRIX PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIX for 12 voters, B>A (note: nontransitivity)
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CONDORSET WINNERS AND LOSERS A < B, 13 vs. 8 A < C, 13 vs 8 B < C, 13 vs. 8 But, A wins plurality vote! A is the Condorcet loser –uniformly despised
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BORDA (1770) give k points to last place give k + a points for second to last give k + 2a points for third from last etc. Borda never elects the Condorcet loser Does Not always elect the Condorcet winner
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SUMMED RANK Is the usual bad? One (1) point for first place Two (2) points for second place etc. Sum the point scores Select the alternative with the lowest score
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ANALYSIS Reverse the ranks k = 1 a = 1 Always selects the Condorcet winner if it exists May select Condorcet loser if it exists
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VOTING PARADOXES What follows is a set of situations where the vote fails to reflect consensus. Many of these situations are famous.
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NO SHOW PARADOX 26%47%2%25% ABBC BCCA CAAB Plurality run-off voting 1 st Round: Eliminate C –A wins in run-off with 51% Suppose the 47% no-show –B is eliminated, C subsequently beats A –the 47% get their second choice, not their 3rd
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INCONSISTENCY PARADOX east west 35%40%25%40%55%5% ABCCBA BCBBCC CAAAAB Plurality run-off voting in each district B wins the East in run-off, wins West outright Taken as a whole, C beats B in a run-off
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ALABAMA PARADOX OF 1881 Hamiltonian Apportionment Seats allocated by integer part, remainder allocated by largest fraction remaining
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OSTRAGORSKI ’ s PARADOX Arises because the following two produce different winners: 1.BEAUTY CONTEST: Each voter votes for the candidate whose stand is closest to his in a majority of issues. 2.ISSUE CONTEST: For each issue, voters pick candidates. The winner is the one winning the majority of issues.
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BEAUTY WINNER AXXXX BXYXX CYXXX DYYYY EYYYY ISSUE WINNERYYX
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SIMPSON ’ s REPRESENTATION PARADOX Percent who favor higher in the East for both employed and unemployed Total percent in favor larger in the West EASTWESTEASTWESTEASTWEST EMPLOYED 400,00090,00080,00015,00020%17% UNEMPLOYED 100,00080,00050,00035,00050%44% total500,000170,000130,00050,00026%29% POPULATION FAVOR INITIATIVE
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