2002
DOI: 10.1007/s001990100218
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A comparison of Dodgson's method and the Borda count

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Cited by 31 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…It will be shown that the Copeland rule ranks alternatives according to their distances to being Condorcet winners. The use of distance information in preference aggregation problems in a finite framework goes back to Dodgson [4] and distance-based aggregation rules are discussed in recent papers by Saari and Merlin [16], Ratliff [13,14] and Klamler [9,10]. 2 The next section sets out the formal framework.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It will be shown that the Copeland rule ranks alternatives according to their distances to being Condorcet winners. The use of distance information in preference aggregation problems in a finite framework goes back to Dodgson [4] and distance-based aggregation rules are discussed in recent papers by Saari and Merlin [16], Ratliff [13,14] and Klamler [9,10]. 2 The next section sets out the formal framework.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of the results mentioned above [28,29,18,19,20] establish that there are sharp discrepancies between the Dodgson ranking and the rankings produced by other rank aggregation rules. Some of these rules (e.g., Borda and Copeland) are polynomial-time computable, so the corresponding results can be viewed as negative results regarding the approximability of the Dodgson ranking by polynomial-time algorithms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…There exists β > 0 such that it is N P-hard to approximate the Dodgson score of a given alternative in an election with m alternatives to within a factor of β ln m. Furthermore, for any > 0, there is no polynomial-time A related question is the approximability of the Dodgson ranking, that is, the ranking of alternatives given by ordering them by nondecreasing Dodgson score. To the best of our knowledge, no rank aggregation function, which maps preferences profiles to rankings of the alternatives, is known to provably produce rankings that are close to the Dodgson rank- ing [28,29,18,19,20] (see the survey of related work in Section 1).…”
Section: Lower Boundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Other authors also proposed alternative distance-based aggregation rules e.g., Eckert and Klamler [19], Klamler [44,43], Meskanen and Nurmi [50], Ratliff [52,53], and Saari and Merlin [54], even though Kemeny's rule [39] could be considered as a landmark in aggregation procedures based on distances. Following Kemeny's rule, Cook and Seiford [14] established an equivalence between the Borda-Kendall method [40] and their approach.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%