Disproportionate division
Abstract
We study the disproportionate version of the classical cake-cutting problem: how efficiently can we divide a cake, here , among agents with different demands summing to ? When all the agents have equal demands of , it is well-known that there exists a fair division with cuts, and this is optimal. For arbitrary demands on the other hand, folklore arguments from algebraic topology show that cuts suffice, and this has been the state of the art for decades. Here, we improve the state of affairs in two ways: we prove that disproportionate division may always be achieved with cuts, and give an effective combinatorial procedure to construct such a division. We also offer a topological conjecture that implies that cuts suffice in general, which would be optimal.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1909.07141,
title = {Disproportionate division},
author = {Logan Crew and Bhargav Narayanan and Sophie Spirkl},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.07141},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
8 pages, submitted