English

Multimode Control Attacks on Elections

Computer Science and Game Theory 2010-07-13 v1 Computational Complexity Data Structures and Algorithms Multiagent Systems

Abstract

In 1992, Bartholdi, Tovey, and Trick opened the study of control attacks on elections---attempts to improve the election outcome by such actions as adding/deleting candidates or voters. That work has led to many results on how algorithms can be used to find attacks on elections and how complexity-theoretic hardness results can be used as shields against attacks. However, all the work in this line has assumed that the attacker employs just a single type of attack. In this paper, we model and study the case in which the attacker launches a multipronged (i.e., multimode) attack. We do so to more realistically capture the richness of real-life settings. For example, an attacker might simultaneously try to suppress some voters, attract new voters into the election, and introduce a spoiler candidate. Our model provides a unified framework for such varied attacks, and by constructing polynomial-time multiprong attack algorithms we prove that for various election systems even such concerted, flexible attacks can be perfectly planned in deterministic polynomial time.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1007.1800,
  title  = {Multimode Control Attacks on Elections},
  author = {Piotr Faliszewski and Edith Hemaspaandra and Lane A. Hemaspaandra},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1007.1800},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

41 pages, 2 tables

R2 v1 2026-06-21T15:46:52.721Z