On the Computational Complexity of Non-dictatorial Aggregation
Lefteris Kirousis, Phokion G. Kolaitis, John Livieratos

TL;DR
This paper studies the computational complexity of determining when non-dictatorial aggregation is possible in voting systems, providing polynomial-time algorithms for various cases and analyzing complexity bounds.
Contribution
It introduces polynomial-time algorithms to decide possibility domains and constructs non-dictatorial aggregators, advancing understanding of aggregation feasibility from an algorithmic perspective.
Findings
Polynomial-time algorithm for checking possibility domains
Constructs non-dictatorial aggregators when possible
Complexity bounds for implicit representations of voting patterns
Abstract
We investigate when non-dictatorial aggregation is possible from an algorithmic perspective, where non-dictatorial aggregation means that the votes cast by the members of a society can be aggregated in such a way that there is no single member of the society that always dictates the collective outcome. We consider the setting in which the members of a society take a position on a fixed collection of issues, where for each issue several different alternatives are possible, but the combination of choices must belong to a given set X of allowable voting patterns. Such a set X is called a possibility domain if there is an aggregator that is non-dictatorial, operates separately on each issue, and returns values among those cast by the society on each issue. We design a polynomial-time algorithm that decides, given a set X of voting patterns, whether or not X is a possibility domain.…
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