Optimizing Viscous Democracy
Abstract
Viscous democracy is a generalization of liquid democracy, a social choice framework in which voters may transitively delegate their votes. In viscous democracy, a "viscosity" factor decreases the weight of a delegation the further it travels, reducing the chance of excessive weight flowing between ideologically misaligned voters. We demonstrate that viscous democracy often significantly improves the quality of group decision-making over liquid democracy. We first show that finding optimal delegations within a viscous setting is NP-hard. However, simulations allow us to explore the practical effects of viscosity. Across social network structures, competence distributions, and delegation mechanisms we find high viscosity reduces the chance of "super-voters" attaining large amounts of weight and increases the number of voters that are able to affect the outcome of elections. This, in turn, improves group accuracy as a whole. As a result, we argue that viscosity should be considered a core component of liquid democracy.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2405.06698,
title = {Optimizing Viscous Democracy},
author = {Ben Armstrong and Shiri Alouf-Heffetz and Nimrod Talmon},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2405.06698},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
To appear at IJCAI 2024