[EM] Juho--about unreversed Nash equilibria
Michael Ossipoff
mikeo2106 at msn.com
Sun Feb 25 17:42:53 PST 2007
Juho said (about margins poor properties with regard to unreversed Nash
equilibria):
This one did not change my feelings much. If you'd say something similar
about sincere votes
I reply:
Here I believe that youre saying you want something said about complete
sincerity rather than just the absence of order-reversal. That would be
nice, but no non-probabilistic method would comply. With even our best
methods, if everyone is voting sincerely, sometimes someone can gain by
order-reversal, and so it wont be a Nash equilibrium.
So we talk about whether, when there is a CW, there are always un-reversed
Nash equilibria. And with margins there often are not.
Juho continues:
, and would provide examples
I reply:
Ok, Ill provide examples. But the margins order-reversal example that I
already posted is an example. With wv, the order-reversal is thwarted and
regretted merely by the B voters truncating. With margins it takes more than
that. Often it takes order-reversal to protect the CW. But, if that isnt so
in that particular example (sometimes equal ranking will do it, sometimes it
takes order-reversal in margins), then Ill post an example tomorrow or soon
after. But, for now, do you seriously think that there isnt an example?
Juho continues:
that demonstrate that this can happen in real life
I reply:
And in what sense do you claim that I havent shown that it can happen, when
Ive posted an example of it happening? Youd have to tell what is
improbable about my example.
Juho continues:
and that the game theoretic choices would be obvious to the voters
Its well established that, if theres a Nash equilibrium, people will find
it.
Juho continues:
maybe then. But now this seems a bit like one addition to the long list of
theoretical claims about the properties of different methods.
I reply:
No. Demonstrated facts about what can happen, and sometimes will happen.
Juho continues:
This criterion sounds a bit tailored to me.
I reply:
first described that test several years ago.
Juho continues:
I find the "no strategies"/"sincere" border line more interesting target of
study than the "no reversal" border line.
I reply:
But we dont choose the border line. Youre not going to find a
non-probabilistic method for which, when theres a CW, there are Nash
equilibria in which the CW wins and everyone votes sincerely (as I define
sincere voting).
The best that can be done is to separate methods according to which ones,
when theres a CW, always have a Nash equilibrium in which no one reverses a
preference.
But youre the one who chose to post an order-reversal example first, you
know. So how come now you dont consider it as important? <smiley>
In any case, the fact that, with margins, there are situations in which the
only Nash equilibria involve order-reversal says something about margins and
its stability and its strategy ridden-ness.
Juho continues:
I also don't like the Nash equilibrium game in the sense that approach seems
to indicate that requiring strategic changes in the ballots is ok.
I reply:
It isnt ok with me either. Thats why I dont like margins. If it isnt ok
with you, then drop margins.
Juho continues:
I'm trying to stay and keep the voters within the sincere voting model.
I reply:
Thats a coincidence--so am I. Some methods do that much better than others.
Juho continues:
In the subsequent mail you discussed the name of the criterion: > Sincere
Nash Equilibrium Criterion (SNEC), or > the Unreversed Nash Equilibrium
Criterion (UNEC). Using some variant with word "unreversed" sounds more
exact to me than a variant with word "sincere".
I reply:
Yes. Ill call it the Unreversed Nash Equilibrium Criterion (URNEC).
Juho continues:
Juho P.S. Just an observation, in case you are interested. Few months back I
wrote on this list about "Ranked Preferences". One reason behind discussing
such methods was to see what alternatives there are to truncation and
winning votes (for situations where strategic threats are _considered_ so
bad that basic Condorcet methods without any protection methods (e.g.
mm(margins) ) are _considered_ not to be enough).
I reply:
If youre suggesting anti-strategy enhancements for Condorcet, please specif
them in a current posting. Ive suggested a few such. Like ARLO and power
truncation. But we aggee that Condorcet doesnt really need them. At least
wv Condorcet doesnt need them.
Mike Ossipoff
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