The Complexity of Manipulative Attacks in Nearly Single-Peaked Electorates
Many electoral bribery, control, and manipulation problems (which we will refer to in general as 'manipulative actions' problems) are NP-hard in the general case. It has recently been noted that many
Many electoral bribery, control, and manipulation problems (which we will refer to in general as “manipulative actions” problems) are NP-hard in the general case. It has recently been noted that many of these problems fall into polynomial time if the electorate is single-peaked (i.e., is polarized along some axis/issue). However, real-world electorates are not truly single-peaked. There are usually some mavericks, and so real-world electorates tend to merely be nearly single-peaked. This paper studies the complexity of manipulative-action algorithms for elections over nearly single-peaked electorates, for various notions of nearness and various election systems. We provide instances where even one maverick jumps the manipulative-action complexity up to $\np$-hardness, but we also provide many instances where a reasonable number of mavericks can be tolerated without increasing the manipulative-action complexity.
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