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The classic fair cake-cutting problem [Steinhaus, 1948] is extended by introducing geometric constraints on the allocated pieces. Specifically, agents may demand to get their share as a square or a rectangle with a bounded length/width ratio. This is a plausible constraint in realistic...
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The classic fair cake-cutting problem [Steinhaus, 1948] is extended by introducing geometric constraints on the allocated pieces. Specifically, agents may demand to get their share as a square or a rectangle with a bounded length/width ratio. This is a plausible constraint in realistic...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010734294
The classic fair cake-cutting problem [Steinhaus, 1948] is extended by introducing geometric constraints on the allocated pieces. Specifically, agents may demand to get their share as a square or a rectangle with a bounded length/width ratio. This is a plausible constraint in realistic...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010336034
The Condorcet jury theorem (CJT) is the probabilistic foundation that underlies jury decision-making and collective information aggregation at large. It has nonetheless been recognized that Condorcet's adoption of a statistically implausible premise – identical competence among all individuals...
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