When Votes Change and Committees Should (Not)

When Votes Change and Committees Should (Not)

Robert Bredereck, Till Fluschnik, Andrzej Kaczmarczyk

Proceedings of the Thirty-First International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Main Track. Pages 144-150. https://doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2022/21

Electing a single committee of a small size is a classical and well-understood voting situation. Being interested in a sequence of committees, we introduce two time-dependent multistage models based on simple scoring-based voting. Therein, we are given a sequence of voting profiles (stages) over the same set of agents and candidates, and our task is to find a small committee for each stage of high score. In the conservative model we additionally require that any two consecutive committees have a small symmetric difference. Analogously, in the revolutionary model we require large symmetric differences. We prove both models to be NP-hard even for a constant number of agents, and, based on this, initiate a parameterized complexity analysis for the most natural parameters and combinations thereof. Among other results, we prove both models to be in XP yet W[1]-hard regarding the number of stages, and that being revolutionary seems to be "easier" than being conservative.
Keywords:
Agent-based and Multi-agent Systems: Computational Social Choice