GTJun 10

Axiomatic Tools for Separating Electoral Control Types, with Applications to Concrete Systems

arXiv:2606.12039v16.6h-index: 42
Predicted impact top 78% in GT · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For researchers in computational social choice, this work automates the separation of control types, reducing reliance on manual counterexamples.

The paper provides axiomatic tools to automatically determine whether electoral control types are distinct or collapse, and applies them to seven voting systems, yielding 64 new collapses and 1901 new separations.

Electoral control is the study of whether an attacker, by structural changes on an election such as adding/deleting/partitioning voters or candidates, can affect the winner in some desired way. Forty-four such attack types are often considered standard, and recently there has been work showing that sometimes the attack types -- though seemingly distinct -- in fact "collapse," that is, for every input, either the attacker can achieve their goal under both of the control types or under neither of the control types. The papers doing this, however, while often exploiting axiomatic results that ensured collapses, found all the separations by human or computer-generated counterexamples. This left open the issue of whether even the separation direction can be driven by axiomatic results that allow large groups of separations to be almost automatically obtained. Our paper provides many such results, and we apply them to seven important voting systems, finding sixty-four new collapses and 1901 new separations. We not only give axiomatic sufficient conditions and one complete characterization result, but also identify some control-problem pairs that universally separate -- in other words, they separate under every voting rule.

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