[EM] Re: a name for random ballot from P
Monkey Puzzle
araucaria.araucana at gmail.com
Tue Mar 22 09:23:00 PST 2005
Jobst, could you please clarify below?
On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 16:56:06 -0800 (PST), Forest Simmons wrote:
> On Sat, 19 Mar 2005, Jobst Heitzig wrote:
> > By the way, here's a simple "procedural" version of the method, to be
> > used in meetings:
> > First, options may be suggested, and for every option it is asked who
> > approves of it. They are written onto blackboard in order of approval.
> > Then some member of the group is picked at random. S/he proposes some of
> > the options, and then this option is subjected to pairwise contests with
> > the more approved ones, beginning with the most approved one. If none of
> > them wins with majority strength, the proposed option wins. Otherwise,
> > the next person is chosen at random and proposes an option, until the
> > proposed option survives all pairwise contests with more approved ones.
> > This will hopefully lead to people proposing very good compromises,
> > since otherwise they will experience to have their proposal defeated by
> > a more approved option, which would make their proposal look somewhat
> > ridiculous.
> >
> > I'd like to ask you to test this procedure with your favourite group!
> >
>
> This procedure is very appealing to me.
> It would be a good way to sell the method in a group setting.
>
> One could use it to pick a restaurant for the group to adjourn to after
> the meeting if they didn't want to test it on a more important decision.
>
> Forest
>
Jobst / Forest :
Could you translate this into a pairwise sorted algorithm for me?
It appears that by starting with the most approved candidate to test
against, you're bubble-sorting downward instead of upward.
Or am I missing something?
Ted
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araucaria dot araucana at gmail dot com
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