Decision making beyond arrow's “impossibility theorem,” with the analysis of effects of collusion and mutual attraction
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3600673
DOI10.1002/int.20324zbMath1157.91013OpenAlexW4232701755MaRDI QIDQ3600673
O. M. Kosheleva, Nguyen Trung Hung, Vladik Ya. Kreinovich
Publication date: 5 February 2009
Published in: International Journal of Intelligent Systems (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/int.20324
Related Items (13)
Joint desirability foundations of social choice and opinion pooling ⋮ Combining Interval and Probabilistic Uncertainty: What Is Computable? ⋮ Beyond p-Boxes and Interval-Valued Moments: Natural Next Approximations to General Imprecise Probabilities ⋮ Reconstructing an open order from its closure, with applications to space-time physics and to logic ⋮ Linear neural networks revisited: from PageRank to family happiness ⋮ Unnamed Item ⋮ Unnamed Item ⋮ Unnamed Item ⋮ Why linear expressions in discounting and in empathy: a symmetry-based explanation ⋮ Theoretical justifications for the empirically successful VIKOR approach to multi-criteria decision making ⋮ Even in simple economic systems, equilibrium can be non-unique: an example ⋮ Need for Diversity in Elected Decision-Making Bodies: Economics-Related Analysis ⋮ Ranking-Based Voting Revisited: Maximum Entropy Approach Leads to Borda Count (and Its Versions)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Polynomial factorization: Sharp bounds, efficient algorithms
- Applications of continuous mathematics to computer science
- Utility functionals with nonpaternalistic intergenerational altruism
- The Bargaining Problem
- Interval-Valued Degrees of Belief: Applications of Interval Computations to Expert Systems and Intelligent Control
- How to divide a territory? A new simple differential formalism for optimization of set functions
- An Envy-Free Cake Division Protocol
- Theory of Moves
This page was built for publication: Decision making beyond arrow's “impossibility theorem,” with the analysis of effects of collusion and mutual attraction