[EM] five monotonic methods that choose from the uncovered set
Forest W Simmons
fsimmons at pcc.edu
Wed Feb 21 13:55:47 PST 2007
I would like to mention that I proposed the first of these five methods
back in December of 2004:
http://lists.electorama.com/pipermail/election-methods-electorama.com/2004-December/014293.html
"Ballots are ordinal with approval cutoff, equal rankings allowed.
Let U(A) be the set of uncovered candidates that cover the approval
winner A. The member of U(A) with the highest approval is the method
winner W."
Shortly after that I was discouraged by an assertion that methods that
always picked from the uncovered set could not be monotonic.
Recently, I realized that, nevertheless, this and similar methods are
monotonic.
The key lemma is this: If an uncovered candidate X covers Y, and this
X moves up in rank on one or more ballots while all of the other
candidates retain their original relative ranks to each other, then X
remains uncovered and the set of candidates that cover Y does not
change.
Proof: Suppose that X is uncovered and covers Y. Then clearly X is
still uncovered, because it still has a beatpath of length two or less
to each of the other candidates. Also, X's upward mobility doesn't
change the set of candidates that Y beats, nor does it change the set
of candidates that beat Y. Therefore it doesn't change the set of
candidates that cover Y. Q.E.D.
A simple application of this lemma shows that in the above method, if W
improves its position relative to the other candidates (either in rank
or in approval or both) then W is still the highest approval uncovered
candidate that covers A.
Similar proofs work for similar methods.
Forest
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