English

Picking a Representative Set of Solutions in Multiobjective Optimization: Axioms, Algorithms, and Experiments

Artificial Intelligence 2025-11-17 v1 Computational Engineering, Finance, and Science Computer Science and Game Theory

Abstract

Many real-world decision-making problems involve optimizing multiple objectives simultaneously, rendering the selection of the most preferred solution a non-trivial problem: All Pareto optimal solutions are viable candidates, and it is typically up to a decision maker to select one for implementation based on their subjective preferences. To reduce the cognitive load on the decision maker, previous work has introduced the Pareto pruning problem, where the goal is to compute a fixed-size subset of Pareto optimal solutions that best represent the full set, as evaluated by a given quality measure. Reframing Pareto pruning as a multiwinner voting problem, we conduct an axiomatic analysis of existing quality measures, uncovering several unintuitive behaviors. Motivated by these findings, we introduce a new measure, directed coverage. We also analyze the computational complexity of optimizing various quality measures, identifying previously unknown boundaries between tractable and intractable cases depending on the number and structure of the objectives. Finally, we present an experimental evaluation, demonstrating that the choice of quality measure has a decisive impact on the characteristics of the selected set of solutions and that our proposed measure performs competitively or even favorably across a range of settings.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2511.10716,
  title  = {Picking a Representative Set of Solutions in Multiobjective Optimization: Axioms, Algorithms, and Experiments},
  author = {Niclas Boehmer and Maximilian T. Wittmann},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2511.10716},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

Accepted to AAAI '26

R2 v1 2026-07-01T07:36:32.304Z