Understanding when and how computational complexity can be used to protect elections against different manipulative actions has been a highly active research area over the past two decades. A recent body of work, however, has shown that many of the NP-hardness shields, previously obtained, vanish when the electorate has single-peaked or nearly single-peaked preferences. In light of these results, we investigate whether it is possible to reimpose NP-hardness shields for such electorates by allowing the voters to specify partial preferences instead of insisting they cast complete ballots. In particular, we show that in single-peaked and nearly single-peaked electorates, if voters are allowed to submit top-truncated ballots, then the complexity of manipulation and bribery for many voting rules increases from being in P to being NP-complete.
CITATION STYLE
Menon, V., & Larson, K. (2016). Reinstating combinatorial protections for manipulation and bribery in single-peaked and nearly single-peaked electorates. In 30th AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, AAAI 2016 (pp. 565–571). AAAI press. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.10026
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