Lotteries for Shared Experiences
We study a setting where tickets for an experience are allocated by lottery. Each agent belongs to a group, and a group is successful if and only if its members receive enough tickets for everyone. A lottery is efficient if it maximizes the number of agents in successful groups, and fair if it gives...
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Zusammenfassung: | We study a setting where tickets for an experience are allocated by lottery.
Each agent belongs to a group, and a group is successful if and only if its
members receive enough tickets for everyone. A lottery is efficient if it
maximizes the number of agents in successful groups, and fair if it gives every
group the same chance of success. We study the efficiency and fairness of
existing approaches, and propose practical alternatives.
If agents must identify the members of their group, a natural solution is the
Group Lottery, which orders groups uniformly at random and processes them
sequentially. We provide tight bounds on the inefficiency and unfairness of
this mechanism, and describe modifications that obtain a fairer allocation.
If agents may request multiple tickets without identifying members of their
group, the most common mechanism is the Individual Lottery, which orders agents
uniformly at random and awards each their request until no tickets remain.
Because each member of a group may apply for (and win) tickets, this approach
can yield arbitrarily unfair and inefficient outcomes. As an alternative, we
propose the Weighted Individual Lottery, in which the processing order is
biased against agents with large requests. Although it is still possible to
have multiple winners in a group, this simple modification makes this event
much less likely. As a result, the Weighted Individual Lottery is approximately
fair and approximately efficient, and similar to the Group Lottery when there
are many more agents than tickets. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2205.10942 |