Abductive and Contrastive Explanations for Scoring Rules in Voting
We view voting rules as classifiers that assign a winner (a class) to a profile of voters' preferences (an instance). We propose to apply techniques from formal explainability, most notably abductive and contrastive explanations, to identify minimal subsets of a preference profile that either i...
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Zusammenfassung: | We view voting rules as classifiers that assign a winner (a class) to a
profile of voters' preferences (an instance). We propose to apply techniques
from formal explainability, most notably abductive and contrastive
explanations, to identify minimal subsets of a preference profile that either
imply the current winner or explain why a different candidate was not elected.
Formal explanations turn out to have strong connections with classical problems
studied in computational social choice such as bribery, possible and necessary
winner identification, and preference learning. We design algorithms for
computing abductive and contrastive explanations for scoring rules. For the
Borda rule, we find a lower bound on the size of the smallest abductive
explanations, and we conduct simulations to identify correlations between
properties of preference profiles and the size of their smallest abductive
explanations. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.12927 |