TL;DR
This paper analyzes how information manipulation via signaling affects outcomes in district-based elections, revealing fundamental differences between private and public signaling strategies and proposing efficient algorithms for certain cases.
Contribution
It introduces semi-public signaling in electoral persuasion, compares it with private and public signaling, and develops approximation algorithms for optimal signaling schemes.
Findings
Private signaling can significantly outperform public signaling in election success probabilities.
Optimal private signaling schemes are computationally efficient to find.
Public signaling schemes are hard to approximate, but relaxations yield effective approximation schemes.
Abstract
We focus on the scenario in which an agent can exploit his information advantage to manipulate the outcome of an election. In particular, we study district-based elections with two candidates, in which the winner of the election is the candidate that wins in the majority of the districts. District-based elections are adopted worldwide (e.g., UK and USA) and are a natural extension of widely studied voting mechanisms (e.g., k-voting and plurality voting). We resort to the Bayesian persuasion framework, where the manipulator (sender) strategically discloses information to the voters (receivers) that update their beliefs rationally. We study both private signaling, in which the sender can use a private communication channel per receiver, and public signaling, in which the sender can use a single communication channel for all the receivers. Furthermore, for the first time, we introduce…
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