NEWS

Welcome to Social Choice Theory for Logicians. Please check back to this website as I will post information about the course as it becomes available.

Lecturer: Eric Pacuit ( website)
Venue: North American Summer School for Logic, Language and Information
(NASSLLI 2012)
Meeting Times: TBA (Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, Day 5)
Location: University of Texas at Austin



Overview


Social Choice Theory is the formal analysis of collective decision making. A growing number of logical systems incorporate insights and ideas from this important field. This course will introduce the key results (including proofs) and the main research themes of Social Choice Theory. The primary objective is to introduce the main mathematical methods and conceptual ideas found in the Social Choice literature. I will also pay special attention to recent logical systems that have been developed to reason about group decision making and how social choice-style analyses are being used by logicians. Specific topics include (a schedule and list of topics will be finalized about a month before the course starts)

  1. Proofs of key Social Choice results (ag., Arrow's Impossibility Theorem, Sen's Impossibility of the Paretian Liberal, and the Gibbard-Satterthwaite Theorem),
  2. Axiomatic characterizations of aggregations procedures (May's Characterization of the majority rule, Maskin's Characterization of majority rule, Fishburn's Characterization of Approval Voting, Young's Characterization of positional voting, Saari's characterization of Borda Count),
  3. Voting paradoxes (eg., Condorcet's paradox, Anscombe's Paradox, the No-Show Paradox),
  4. Voting games (i.e., simple games) and models of "power" or "influence" (eg., Banzhaf power index, Shapley-Shubik power index)
  5. Generalizations of the classic framework (eg., assuming there are infinitely many voters, Saari's geometric approach to social choice, judgement aggregation), and
  6. Modal preference logics for reasoning about multiagent preference aggregation.

The course will not only provide a broad overview of the field of Social Choice from a logicians perspective, but will also discuss key technical results of particular interest to logicians. The main goal is to provide a solid foundation for students that want to incorporate results and ideas from Social Choice Theory into their field of study.

Reading Material

The course will be based on the following articles (during the course I will fill in many of the missing details and touch on some additional topics)
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Schedule

Below is a schedule for the course (which is subject to change) that will contain links to any handouts, slides and relevant papers for each lecture.

Date Topic Notes/Readings
Day 1
June 18, 2011
Introduction, Motivation and Background (slides)

Day 2
June 19, 2011
TBD

Day 3
June 20, 2011
TBD

Day 4
June 21, 2011
TBD

Day 5
June 22, 2011
TBD



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Related Readings


Below is a list of some additional reading material related to some of the topics we will discuss in this course. This is not a complete list of all relevant material, but a reasonably large sampling.

Articles Books
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Additional Information

loriweb.org: a web portal with a number of important resources (call for papers, conference announcements, available positions, general discussions, etc.).

Recent courses and seminars (contains links to relevant papers) Relevant Conferences up_arrowBack to the menu