Characterizations of Pareto-efficient, fair, and strategy-proof allocation rules in queueing problems
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Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3646588 (Why is no real title available?)
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 53195 (Why is no real title available?)
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- The Division Problem with Single-Peaked Preferences: A Characterization of the Uniform Allocation Rule
- The Manipulation of Social Choice Mechanisms that Do Not Leave "Too Much" to Chance
Cited in
(30)- Egalitarian equivalence and strategyproofness in the queueing problem
- A characterization of the symmetrically balanced VCG rule in the queueing problem
- A characterization of the Vickrey rule in slot allocation problems
- When queueing is better than push and shove
- Strategy-proof and anonymous rule in queueing problems: a relationship between equity and efficiency
- Fair Queuing and Other Probabilistic Allocation Methods
- Subgroup additivity in the queueing problem
- No-envy, solidarity, and strategy-proofness in the queueing problem
- Fair queueing
- Balanced VCG mechanisms for sequencing problems
- A characterization of the Shapley value in queueing problems
- The on-line transfer rule for queueing with arrivals
- Generalized welfare lower bounds and strategyproofness in sequencing problems
- Characterizations of pivotal mechanisms in the queueing problem
- Egalitarianism in the queueing problem
- Weak group strategy-proof and queue-efficient mechanisms for the queueing problem with multiple machines
- No-envy and egalitarian-equivalence under multi-object-demand for heterogeneous objects
- Prior-free online mechanisms for queueing with arrivals
- No-envy in the queueing problem with multiple identical machines
- Second-best mechanisms in queuing problems without transfers: the role of random priorities
- Queueing games with an endogenous number of machines
- Incentives and justice for sequencing problems
- A pessimistic approach to the queueing problem
- No-envy in queueing problems
- The Shapley value in positional queueing problems
- Reordering an existing queue
- Recent developments in the queueing problem
- Consistent queueing rules
- Jumping the queue: an experiment on procedural preferences
- Welfare lower bounds and strategy-proofness in the queueing problem
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