Double-interval societies
2013
Consider a society of voters, each of whom specify an approval set over a linear political spectrum. We examine double-interval societies, in which each person's approval set is represented by two disjoint closed intervals, and study this situation where the approval sets are pairwise-intersecting: every pair of voters has a point in the intersection of their approval sets. The approval ratio for a society is, loosely speaking, the popularity of the most popular position on the spectrum. We study the question: what is the minimal guaranteed approval ratio for such a society? We provide a lower bound for the approval ratio, and examine a family of societies that have rather low approval ratios. These societies arise from double-n strings: arrangements of n symbols in which each symbol appears exactly twice.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
2
References
4
Citations
NaN
KQI