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VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

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PARADOXES OCCUR 1992 ELECTION –Bush and Poirot win popular election 2000 Election –Bush II loses popular vote, wins election They happen every day in the rack/stack method used in DoD
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VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland
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Page 1: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

VOTING PARADOXES

AND HOW TO

DEAL WITH THEM

Hannu NurmiUniversity of

TurkuTurku, Finland

Page 2: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

VOTING

• Satisfaction and justice in voting outcomes is important

• Every day, somebody is rackin’ and stackin’

• Voting is a way to reach equitable consensus

Page 3: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

PARADOXES OCCUR

• 1992 ELECTION– Bush and Poirot win popular election

• 2000 Election– Bush II loses popular vote, wins

election• They happen every day in the

rack/stack method used in DoD

Page 4: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

ASSUMPTIONS

• Equal Weight• One Vote Each• Independence (no gaming)• Transitivity (A < B and B < C implies A < C)

• DEFN: An Alternative is one of the choices• NOTATION: a > b means a is prefered to b

Page 5: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

PREFERENCE PROFILE

COUNT

3 4 2 7 5 6

1ST A B C A B C

2ND B C A C A B

3RD C A B B C A

Page 6: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

WHO WINS?1ST PLACE VOTES

A 3+7 10B 4+5 9C 2+6 8

LAST PLACE VOTESA 4+6 10B 2+7 9C 3+5 8

TOP TWOA 3+2+7+5 19B 3+4+5+6 18C 4+2+7+7 16

Page 7: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

A B CA 12 15B 15 12C 12 15

A B CA 0 1B 1 0C 0 1

TOURNAMENT MATRIX

PAIRWISE COMPARISON MATRIXfor 12 voters, B>A (note: nontransitivity)

Page 8: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

CONDORSET WINNERS AND LOSERS

• A < B, 13 vs. 8• A < C, 13 vs 8• B < C, 13 vs. 8• But, A wins

plurality vote!• A is the Condorcet

loser– uniformly despised

1 7 7 6A A B CB C C BC B A A

Page 9: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

BORDA (1770)

• give k points to last place• give k + a points for second to last• give k + 2a points for third from last• etc.

• Borda never elects the Condorcet loser• Does Not always elect the Condorcet

winner

Page 10: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

SUMMED RANKIs the usual bad?

• One (1) point for first place• Two (2) points for second place• etc.

• Sum the point scores• Select the alternative with the

lowest score

Page 11: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

ANALYSIS

• Reverse the ranks• k = 1• a = 1

• Always selects the Condorcet winner if it exists

• May select Condorcet loser if it exists

Page 12: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

VOTING PARADOXES

• What follows is a set of situations where the vote fails to reflect consensus. Many of these situations are famous.

Page 13: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

NO SHOW PARADOX26% 47% 2% 25%

A B B CB C C AC A A B

• Plurality run-off voting• 1st Round: Eliminate C

– A wins in run-off with 51%• Suppose the 47% no-show

– B is eliminated, C subsequently beats A– the 47% get their second choice, not their 3rd

Page 14: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

INCONSISTENCY PARADOX

east east east west west west35% 40% 25% 40% 55% 5%

A B C C B AB C B B C CC A A A A B

• Plurality run-off voting in each district• B wins the East in run-off, wins West

outright• Taken as a whole, C beats B in a run-off

Page 15: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

ALABAMA PARADOX OF 1881Hamiltonian Apportionment

TOTAL SEATS 299 300

ALABAMA 7.646 7.671TEXAS 9.64 9.672

ILLINOIS 18.64 18.7

ALABAMA SEATS 8 7

• Seats allocated by integer part, remainder allocated by largest fraction remaining

seatsseat

poppop ii

Page 16: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

OSTRAGORSKI’s PARADOX

Arises because the following two produce different winners:

1. BEAUTY CONTEST: Each voter votes for the candidate whose stand is closest to his in a majority of issues.

2. ISSUE CONTEST: For each issue, voters pick candidates. The winner is the one winning the majority of issues.

Page 17: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

BEAUTY WINNER

A X X X X

B X Y X X

C Y X X X

D Y Y Y Y

E Y Y Y Y

ISSUE WINNER Y Y X

Page 18: VOTING PARADOXES AND HOW TO DEAL WITH THEM Hannu Nurmi University of Turku Turku, Finland.

SIMPSON’s REPRESENTATION PARADOX

• Percent who favor higher in the East for both employed and unemployed

• Total percent in favor larger in the West

EAST WEST EAST WEST EAST WEST

EMPLOYED 400,000 90,000 80,000 15,000 20% 17%

UNEMPLOYED 100,000 80,000 50,000 35,000 50% 44%

total 500,000 170,000 130,000 50,000 26% 29%

POPULATIONFAVOR

INITIATIVE


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