Dear participants of the Online Social Choice and Welfare Seminar,
Our next seminar will be next Tuesday (2 December). Here are the details.
Time: 9PM GMT (1PM Vancouver, 4PM Boston, 6PM Rio de Janeiro, 9PM London, 10PM Paris, 8AM Wednesday in Sydney, 10AM Wednesday in Auckland)
Speaker: Bailey Flanigan (MIT, Political Science and Computer Science)
Title: “Smoothed Analysis of Social Choice, Revisited”
Abstract: Classical social choice theory is full of axiomatic impossibility results: no voting rule can satisfy all important axioms on every possible preference profile. In this talk, I’ll explore the extent to which these worst-case impossibilities are resolved under “smoothed” noise, where voters’ rankings may be adversarial but are perturbed by small amounts of noise. Within this model, I’ll present simple, general conditions under which common axioms and paradoxes are smoothed-satisfied or smoothed-violated. I’ll then focus on a canonical class of noise models based on the Mallows distribution, which reveals additional, practically-important distinctions between voting rules. Together, these results offer a more nuanced picture of when smoothed analysis meaningfully circumvents axiomatic impossibilities—and when it does not
(Joint work with Daniel Halpern and Alex Psomas)
You are receiving this email because you are subscribed to the Seminar Mailing List. The Zoom link will be sent out on Sunday evening.
Reminder: On the seminar website you can find the video recordings, slides and supplementary materials for all past presentations, as well as information about future presentations.
About Mauricio Bugarin
Mauricio Soares Bugarin is full professor at the Economics Department of the University of Brasilia, Brasilia, Brazil. He received his PhD from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1997 and is currently Leader of the Economics and Politics Research Group (CNPq-UnB). From 2006 to 2011 he was full professor of Economics at Insper Institute, São Paulo, Brazil, where he served as the director of undergraduate studies in Economics and created the joint degree program in Economics and Business Administration.
Prof. Bugarin is a research fellow of the Brazilian National Research Council (CNPq) and served as a member of the Standing Committee of the Latin American Chapter of the Econometric Society from 2007 to 2011. He has produced numerous research articles published in peer reviewed journals, including the Journal of Mathematical Economics, Oxford Academic Papers, Public Choice, and Social Choice and Welfare; a book on the control of public expenditure in Brazil published by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation; several academic book chapters; and has received several academic prizes including Brazilian National Treasure Secretariat Prizes (Public Finance), a National Health Economics Prize, and the Haralambos Simeonides Prize for the best article in Economics published in a year by a Brazilian author.
Prof. Bugarin’s main interests include public economics, public finance and the relationship between economics and politics. He regularly teaches PhD courses in game theory and mechanism design, the economics of incentives and information and positive political economics.