We characterize all preference profiles at which the approval (voting) rule is manipulable, under three extensions of preferences to sets of candidates: by comparison of worst candidates, best candidates, or by comparison based on stochastic dominance. We perform a similar exercise for k-approval rules, where voters approve of a fixed number k of candidates. These results can be used to compare (k-)approval rules with respect to their manipulability. Analytical results are obtained for the case of two voters, specifically, the values of k for which the k-approval rule is minimally manipulable-has the smallest number of manipulable preference profiles-under the various preference extensions are determined. For the number of voters going to infinity, an asymptotic result is that the k-approval rule with k around half the number of candidates is minimally manipulable among all scoring rules. Further results are obtained by simulation and indicate that k-approval rules may improve on the approval rule as far as manipulability is concerned. © 2011 The Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Peters, H., Roy, S., & Storcken, T. (2012). On the manipulability of approval voting and related scoring rules. Social Choice and Welfare, 39(2–3), 399–429. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00355-011-0621-7
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