LOAug 30, 2023
Deontic Paradoxes in ASP with Weak ConstraintsChristian Hatschka, Agata Ciabattoni, Thomas Eiter
The rise of powerful AI technology for a range of applications that are sensitive to legal, social, and ethical norms demands decision-making support in presence of norms and regulations. Normative reasoning is the realm of deontic logics, that are challenged by well-known benchmark problems (deontic paradoxes), and lack efficient computational tools. In this paper, we use Answer Set Programming (ASP) for addressing these shortcomings and showcase how to encode and resolve several well-known deontic paradoxes utilizing weak constraints. By abstracting and generalizing this encoding, we present a methodology for translating normative systems in ASP with weak constraints. This methodology is applied to "ethical" versions of Pac-man, where we obtain a comparable performance with related works, but ethically preferable results.
2.2GTMay 21
Multi-Winner Voting Games in TU and NTU: When is the Core Always Non-Empty?Jiehua Chen, Christian Hatschka
Multi-winner approval voting selects a size-$k$ committee that aggregates voters' approval preferences over a set of alternatives. A central question is coalitional stability: No coalition should be able to pick a committee -- of size at most its proportional share -- under which every coalition member has strictly more approved alternatives. This notion, introduced by Aziz et al. (2017) as core-stable committees, is naturally interpreted as a core notion with non-transferable utility. We introduce multi-winner voting games, a cooperative-game framework that unifies prior work and supports a systematic study of two utility-transfer models across different voting rules. Players are voters. Each coalition has a proportional seat cap and may only propose admissible committees up to that size. Fixing a multi-winner rule, each admissible committee induces a utility vector for the members of the coalition. In the transferable utility (TU) model, a coalition may redistribute the total utility of an admissible committee among its members. In the non-transferable utility (NTU) model, a coalition may only use utility vectors that are realized directly by some admissible committee. The core consists of utility vectors feasible for the grand coalition that are not blocked by any coalition. A coalition is blocking if it can propose an admissible committee that makes all its members strictly better off, directly in NTU and after redistribution in TU. When instantiated with the standard PAV/approval utility, the NTU-core is equivalent to the core-stable committee concept studied in prior work. To our knowledge, the TU-core for multi-winner voting has not been previously studied. We analyze core existence and computation for four prominent rules: Approval Voting (AV), Satisfaction Approval Voting (SAV), Chamberlin--Courant (CC), Proportional Approval Voting (PAV).