Finding robust solutions to stable marriage

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Abstract

We study the notion of robustness in stable matching problems. We first define robustness by introducing (a, b)-supermatches. An (a, b)-supermatch is a stable matching in which if a pairs break up it is possible to find another stable matching by changing the partners of those a pairs and at most b other pairs. In this context, we define the most robust stable matching as a (1, b)-supermatch where b is minimum. We show that checking whether a given stable matching is a (1, b)-supermatch can be done in polynomial time. Next, we use this procedure to design a constraint programming model, a local search approach, and a genetic algorithm to find the most robust stable matching. Our empirical evaluation on large instances show that local search outperforms the other approaches.

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Genc, B., Siala, M., Simonin, G., & O’Sullivan, B. (2017). Finding robust solutions to stable marriage. In IJCAI International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (Vol. 0, pp. 631–637). International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence. https://doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2017/88

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