Some commonly used rules for random social choice are:
Random dictatorship - a voter is selected at random, and determines the outcome. If the preferences are strict, this yields a mixture in which the weight of each alternative is exactly proportional to the number of voters who rank it first. If the preferences are weak, and the chosen voter is indifferent between two or more best options, then a second voter is selected at random to choose among them, and so on. This extension is called
random serial dictatorship. It satisfies ex-post efficiency, strong SD-strategyproofness, very-strong-SD-participation, agenda-consistency, and cloning-consistency. It fails Condorcet consistency, composition consistency, and (with weak preferences) population consistency.
Max Borda - returns a mixture in which all alternatives with the highest
Borda count have an equal weight, and all other alternatives have a weight of 0. In other words, it picks randomly one of the Borde winners (other
score functions can be used instead of Borda). It satisfies SD-efficiency, strong-SD participation, and population-consistency, but does not satisfy any form of strategyproofness, or any other consistency.
Proportional Borda - returns a mixture in which the weight of each alternative is proportional to its
Borda count. In other words, it randomizes between
all alternatives, where the probability of each alternative is proportional to its score (other
score functions can be used instead of Borda). It satisfies strong SD-strategyproofness, strong SD-participation, and population consistency, but not any form of efficiency, or any other consistency.
Maximal lotteries - a rule based on pairwise comparisons of alternatives. For any two alternatives
x,y, we compute how many voters prefer
x to y, and how many voters prefer
y to
x, and let
Mxy be the difference. The resulting matrix
M is called the
majority margin matrix. A mixture
p is called
maximal iff p^T M \geq 0. When interpreted as a lottery, it means that
p is weakly preferred to any other lottery by an
expected majority of voters (the expected number of agents who prefer the alternative returned by
p to that returned by any other lottery
q, is at least as large as the expected number of agents who prefer the alternative returned by
q to that returned by
p). A maximal lottery is the continuous analogue of a
Condorcet winner. However, while a Condorcet winner might not exist, a maximal lottery always exists. This follows from applying the
Minimax theorem to an appropriate symmetric two-player
zero-sum game. It satisfies PC-efficiency, DD-strategyproofness, PC-participation, and all consistency properties - particularly, Condorcet consistency. == See also ==