Rules for Choosing Societal Tradeoffs

Authors

  • Vincent Conitzer Duke University
  • Rupert Freeman Duke University
  • Markus Brill Duke University
  • Yuqian Li Duke University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.10055

Keywords:

societal tradeoffs, axiomatizations, linear programming

Abstract

We study the societal tradeoffs problem, where a set of voters each submit their ideal tradeoff value between each pair of activities (e.g., "using a gallon of gasoline is as bad as creating 2 bags of landfill trash"), and these are then aggregated into the societal tradeoff vector using a rule. We introduce the family of distance-based rules and show that these can be justified as maximum likelihood estimators of the truth. Within this family, we single out the logarithmic distance-based rule as especially appealing based on a social-choice-theoretic axiomatization. We give an efficient algorithm for executing this rule as well as an approximate hill climbing algorithm, and evaluate these experimentally.

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Published

2016-02-21

How to Cite

Conitzer, V., Freeman, R., Brill, M., & Li, Y. (2016). Rules for Choosing Societal Tradeoffs. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.10055

Issue

Section

Technical Papers: Game Theory and Economic Paradigms