English

Voting on Cyclic Orders, Group Theory, and Ballots

Computer Science and Game Theory 2024-07-23 v1 Representation Theory

Abstract

A cyclic order may be thought of informally as a way to seat people around a table, perhaps for a game of chance or for dinner. Given a set of agents such as {A,B,C}\{A,B,C\}, we can formalize this by defining a cyclic order as a permutation or linear order on this finite set, under the equivalence relation where ABCA\succ B\succ C is identified with both BCAB\succ C\succ A and CABC\succ A\succ B. As with other collections of sets with some structure, we might want to aggregate preferences of a (possibly different) set of voters on the set of possible ways to choose a cyclic order. However, given the combinatorial explosion of the number of full rankings of cyclic orders, one may not wish to use the usual voting machinery. This raises the question of what sort of ballots may be appropriate; a single cyclic order, a set of them, or some other ballot type? Further, there is a natural action of the group of permutations on the set of agents. A reasonable requirement for a choice procedure would be to respect this symmetry (the equivalent of neutrality in normal voting theory). In this paper we will exploit the representation theory of the symmetric group to analyze several natural types of ballots for voting on cyclic orders, and points-based procedures using such ballots. We provide a full characterization of such procedures for two quite different ballot types for n=4n=4, along with the most important observations for n=5n=5.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2211.04545,
  title  = {Voting on Cyclic Orders, Group Theory, and Ballots},
  author = {Karl-Dieter Crisman and Abraham Holleran and Micah Martin and Josephine Noonan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2211.04545},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

29 pages, to be published in conference proceedings from AMS Special Session on The Mathematics of Decisions, Elections and Games, 2022

R2 v1 2026-06-28T05:27:28.391Z