The following stochastic orders are useful in the theory of
random social choice. They are used to compare the outcomes of random social choice functions, in order to check them for efficiency or other desirable criteria. The dominance orders below are ordered from the most conservative to the least conservative. They are exemplified on random variables over the finite support {30,20,10}.
Deterministic dominance, denoted A\succeq_\mathrm{dd} B, means that every possible outcome of A is at least as good as every possible outcome of B: for all
x \Pr[A=x]\cdot \Pr[B=y] = 0. In other words: \Pr[A\geq B] = 1. For example, 0.6 \times 30 + 0.4 \times 20 \succeq_\mathrm{dd} 0.5 \times 20 + 0.5 \times 10.
Bilinear dominance, denoted A\succeq_\mathrm{bd} B, means that, for every possible outcome, the probability that A yields the better one and B yields the worse one is at least as large as the probability the other way around: for all x\Pr[A=x]\cdot \Pr[B=y] \leq \Pr[A=y]\cdot \Pr[B=x] For example, 0.5 \times 30 + 0.5 \times 20 \succeq_\mathrm{bd} 0.33 \times 30 + 0.33 \times 20 + 0.34 \times 10.
Stochastic dominance (already mentioned above), denoted A\succeq_\mathrm{sd} B, means that, for every possible outcome
x, the probability that A yields at least
x is at least as large as the probability that B yields at least
x: for all x, \Pr[A\geq x]\geq \Pr[B\geq x]. For example, 0.5 \times 30 + 0.5 \times 10 \succeq_\mathrm{sd} 0.5 \times 20 + 0.5\times 10.
Pairwise-comparison dominance, denoted A\succeq_\mathrm{pc} B, means that the probability that that A yields a better outcome than B is larger than the other way around: \Pr[A\geq B]\geq\Pr[B\geq A]. For example, 0.67 \times 30 + 0.33 \times 10 \succeq_\mathrm{pc} 1.0 \times 20.
Downward-lexicographic dominance, denoted A\succeq_\mathrm{dl} B, means that A has a larger probability than B of returning the best outcome, or both A and B have the same probability to return the best outcome but A has a larger probability than B of returning the second-best best outcome, etc.
Upward-lexicographic dominance is defined analogously based on the probability to return the
worst outcomes. See
lexicographic dominance. ==Other stochastic orders==