How Hard Is it to Bribe the Judges? A Study of the Complexity of Bribery in Judgment Aggregation
نویسندگان
چکیده
Endriss et al. [1,2] initiated the complexity-theoretic study of problems related to judgment aggregation. We extend their results for manipulating two specific judgment aggregation procedures to a whole class of such procedures, and we obtain stronger results by considering not only the classical complexity (NP-hardness) but the parameterized complexity (W[2]-hardness) of these problems with respect to natural parameters. Furthermore, we introduce and study the closely related issue of bribery in judgment aggregation, inspired by work on bribery in voting (see, e.g., [3,4,5]). In manipulation scenarios one of the judges seeks to influence the outcome of the judgment aggregation procedure used by reporting an insincere judgment set. In bribery scenarios, however, an external actor, the briber, seeks to influence the outcome of the judgment aggregation procedure used by bribing some of the judges without exceeding his or her budget. We study three variants of bribery and show W[2]-hardness of the corresponding problems for natural parameters and for one specific judgment aggregation procedure. We also show that in certain special cases one can determine in polynomial time whether there is a successful bribery action.
منابع مشابه
Bribery and Control in Judgment Aggregation1
In computational social choice, the complexity of changing the outcome of elections via manipulation, bribery, and various control actions, such as adding or deleting candidates or voters, has been studied intensely. Endriss et al. [13, 14] initiated the complexity-theoretic study of problems related to judgment aggregation. We extend their results on manipulation to a whole class of judgment a...
متن کاملرشوه در زمان توقف حق بر آن
From the viewpoint of some experts in Sharia law, paying bribes in lawsuits by the beneficiary is lawful. Some others believe that this permission is only possible when obtaining the right is restricted to paying the bribe. Various reasons, including Islamic traditions Hadiths[, the rule of denial of hardship, and the permission to obtain the right are the evidences for this verdict. Studies sh...
متن کاملComputational Complexity in Three Areas of Computational Social Choice: Possible Winners, Unidirectional Covering Sets, and Judgment Aggregation
This thesis studies the computational complexity of different problems from three areas of computational social choice. The first one is voting, and especially the problem of determining whether a distinguished candidate can be a winner in an election with some kind of incomplete information. The second setting is in the broader sense related to the problem of determining winners. Here the comp...
متن کاملHow Hard Is Bribery in Elections?
We study the complexity of influencing elections through bribery: How computationally complex is it for an external actor to determine whether by a certain amount of bribing voters a specified candidate can be made the election’s winner? We study this problem for election systems as varied as scoring protocols and Dodgson voting, and in a variety of settings regarding homogeneous-vs.-nonhomogen...
متن کاملThe Endogenous Choice of Bribe Type under Asymmetric Punishment
As an instrument of corruption control, it has been argued that asymmetric punishment can eliminate harassment bribery if whistle-blowing is cheap and e ective. In a more realistic environment where bribery is most likely to survive and another type of bribery non harassment one coexists, this paper investigates how asymmetric punishment a ects the endogenous choice of bribe type to the bribe-g...
متن کامل