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Coherence (fairness)

Coherence,[1] also called uniformity[2]: Thm.8.3  or consistency, is a criterion for evaluating rules for fair division. Coherence requires that the outcome of a fairness rule is fair not only for the overall problem, but also for each sub-problem. Every part of a fair division should be fair.[2]

The coherence requirement was first studied in the context of apportionment. In this context, failure to satisfy coherence is called the new states paradox: when a new state enters the union, and the house size is enlarged to accommodate the number of seats allocated to this new state, some other unrelated states are affected. Coherence is also relevant to other fair division problems, such as bankruptcy problems.

Definition edit

There is a resource to allocate, denoted by  . For example, it can be an integer representing the number of seats in a house of representatives. The resource should be allocated between some   agents. For example, these can be federal states or political parties. The agents have different entitlements, denoted by a vector  . For example, ti can be the fraction of votes won by party i. An allocation is a vector   with  . An allocation rule is a rule that, for any   and entitlement vector  , returns an allocation vector  .

An allocation rule is called coherent (or uniform) if, for every subset S of agents, if the rule is activated on the subset of the resource  , and on the entitlement vector  , then the result is the allocation vector  . That is: when the rule is activated on a subset of the agents, with the subset of resources they received, the result for them is the same.

Handling ties edit

In general, an allocation rule may return more than one allocation (in case of a tie). In this case, the definition should be updated. Denote the allocation rule by  , and Denote by   the set of allocation vectors returned by   on the resource   and entitlement vector  . The rule   is called coherent if the following holds for every allocation vector   and any subset S of agents:[3]: Sec.4 

  •  . That is, every part of every possible solution to the grand problem, is a possible solution to the sub-problem.
  • For every   and  , we have  . That is, if there are other (tied) solutions to the sub-problems, then putting them instead of the original solutions to the sub-problems yield other (tied) solutions to the grand problem.

Coherence in apportionment edit

In apportionment problems, the resource to allocate is discrete, for example, the seats in a parliament. Therefore, each agent must receive an integer allocation.

Non-coherent methods: the new state paradox edit

One of the most intuitive rules for apportionment of seats in a parliament is the largest remainder method (LRM). This method dictates that the entitlement vector should be normalized such that the sum of entitlements equals   (the total number of seats to allocate). Then each agent should get his normalized entitlement (often called quota) rounded down. If there are remaining seats, they should be allocated to the agents with the largest remainder – the largest fraction of the entitlement. Surprisingly, this rule is not coherent. As a simple example, suppose   and the normalized entitlements of Alice, Bob and Chana are 0.4, 1.35, 3.25 respectively. Then the unique allocation returned by LRM is 1, 1, 3 (the initial allocation is 0, 1, 3, and the extra seat goes to Alice, since her remainder 0.4 is largest). Now, suppose that we activate the same rule on Alice and Bob alone, with their combined allocation of 2. The normalized entitlements are now 0.4/1.75 × 2 ≈ 0.45 and 1.35/1.75 × 2 ≈ 1.54. Therefore, the unique allocation returned by LRM is 0, 2 rather than 1, 1. This means that in the grand solution 1, 1, 3, the internal division between Alice and Bob does not follow the principle of largest remainders – it is not coherent.

Another way to look at this non-coherence is as follows. Suppose that the house size is 2, and there are two states A, B with quotas 0.4, 1.35. Then the unique allocation given by LRM is 0, 2. Now, a new state C joins the union, with quota 3.25. It is allocated 3 seats, and the house size is increased to 5 to accommodate these new seats. This change should not affect the existing states A and B. In fact, with the LRM, the existing states are affected: state A gains a seat, while state B loses a seat. This is called the new state paradox.

The new state paradox was actually observed in 1907, when Oklahoma became a state. It was given a fair share 5 of seats, and the total number of seats increased by that number – from 386 to 391 members. A recomputation of apportionment affected the number of seats because of other states: New York lost a seat, while Maine gained one.[4]: 232–233 [5]

Coherent methods edit

Every divisor method is coherent. This follows directly from their description as picking sequences: at each iteration, the next agent to pick an item is the one with the highest ratio (entitlement / divisor). Therefore, the relative priority ordering between agents is the same even if we consider a subset of the agents.

Properties of coherent methods edit

When coherency is combined with other natural requirements, it characterizes a structured class of apportionment methods. Such characterizations were proved by various authors.[3]: Sec.1  All results assume that the rules are homogeneous ("decent").

  • Hylland[6]: Thm.3, 10  proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is balanced and concordant, then it is compatible with a divisor method.
  • Balinsky and Young[2]: Thm.8.3  proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous and balanced, then it is a rank-index method (a super-class of divisor methods). The opposite is also true: among the anonymous and balanced methods, a method is coherent if and only if it is a rank-index method.
  • Balinsky and Young[2]: Thm.8.4, p.147  proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous, concordant and weakly exact, then it is a divisor method.
  • Balinsky and Rachev[7][8]: Thm.2.2, p.8  proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous, order-preserving, weakly exact and complete, then it is a divisor method.
  • Palomares, Pukelsheim and Ramirez[3] proved that:
    • if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous and balanced, then it is house-monotone;
    • if, in addition, it is also concordant, then it is vote-ratio monotone;
    • if, in addition, it is also strongly exact, then it is compatible with a divisor method (that is, it returns a subset of the allocations returned by a divisor method);
    • if, in addition, it is also complete, then it is a divisor method.
  • Young proved that the unique apportionment method that is a coherent extension of the natural two-party apportionment rule of rounding to the nearest integer is the Webster method.[9]: 49–50, 190 [10]: Sub.9.10 

Coherence in bankruptcy problems edit

In bankruptcy problems, the resource to allocate is continuous, for example, the amount of money left by a debtor. Each agent can get any fraction of the resource. However, the sum of entitlements is usually larger than the total remaining resource.

The most intuitive rule for solving such problems is the proportional rule, in which each agent gets a part of the resource proportional to his entitlement. This rule is definitely coherent. However, it is not the only coherent rule: the Talmudic rule of the contested garment can be extended to a coherent division rule.[1]: Sec.4 

Coherence in organ allocation edit

In most countries, the number of patients waiting for an organ transplantation is much larger than the number of available organs. Therefore, most countries choose who to allocate an organ to by some priority-ordering. Surprisingly, some priority orderings used in practice are not coherent. For example, one rule used by UNOS in the past was as follows:[1]: Sec.6 

  • Each patient is assigned a personal score, based on some medical data.
  • Each patient is assigned a bonus, which is 10 times the fraction of patients who waited less than him.
  • The agents are prioritized by the sum of their score + bonus.

Suppose the personal scores of some four patients A, B, C, D are 16, 21, 20, 23. Suppose their waiting times are A > B > C > D. Accordingly, their bonuses are 10, 7.5, 5, 2.5. So their sums are 26, 28.5, 25, 25.5, and the priority order is B > A > D > C. Now, after B receives an organ, the personal scores of A, C, D remain the same, but the bonuses change to 10, 6.67, 3.33, so the sums are 26, 26.67, 26.33, and the priority order is C > D > A. This inverts the order between the three agents.

In order to have a coherent priority ordering, the priority should be determined only by personal traits. For example, the bonus can be computed by the number of months in line, rather than by the fraction of patients.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Balinski, Michel (2005-06-01). "What Is Just?". The American Mathematical Monthly. 112 (6): 502–511. doi:10.1080/00029890.2005.11920221. ISSN 0002-9890. S2CID 32125041.
  2. ^ a b c d Balinski, Michel L.; Young, H. Peyton (2001) [1982]. Fair Representation: Meeting the Ideal of One Man, One Vote. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-02724-9.
  3. ^ a b c Palomares, Antonio; Pukelsheim, Friedrich; Ramírez, Victoriano (2016-09-01). "The whole and its parts: On the coherence theorem of Balinski and Young". Mathematical Social Sciences. 83: 11–19. doi:10.1016/j.mathsocsci.2016.06.001. ISSN 0165-4896.
  4. ^ Stein, James D. (2008). How Math Explains the World: A Guide to the Power of Numbers, from Car Repair to Modern Physics. New York: Smithsonian Books. ISBN 9780061241765.
  5. ^ Caulfield, Michael J. (November 2010). "Apportioning Representatives in the United States Congress – Paradoxes of Apportionment". Convergence. Mathematical Association of America. doi:10.4169/loci003163.
  6. ^ Hylland, Aannud. "Allotment methods: procedures for proportional distribution of indivisible entities". 1978.
  7. ^ Balinski, Michel L.; Rachev, Svetlozar T. (1993-01-01). "Rounding Proportions:Rules of Rounding". Numerical Functional Analysis and Optimization. 14 (5–6): 475–501. doi:10.1080/01630569308816535. ISSN 0163-0563.
  8. ^ Michel Balinsky and Svetlozar Rachev (1997). "Rounding proportions: methods of rounding". Mathematical Scientist, Volume 22, Issue 1, pages 1–26. from the original on 2021-09-14. Retrieved 2021-09-14.
  9. ^ Young, Peyton H. (1995). Equity: in theory and practice. Princeton University Press.
  10. ^ Pukelsheim, Friedrich (2017), Pukelsheim, Friedrich (ed.), "Securing System Consistency: Coherence and Paradoxes", Proportional Representation: Apportionment Methods and Their Applications, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 159–183, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-64707-4_9, ISBN 978-3-319-64707-4, retrieved 2021-09-20.
  11. ^ Fleurbaey, Marc (April 1997). "Equity: In Theory and Practice, H. Peyton Young. Princeton University Press, 1994, 238 + xv pages". Economics & Philosophy. 13 (1): 128–131. doi:10.1017/S0266267100004387. ISSN 1474-0028. S2CID 145232571.

coherence, fairness, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, coherence, fairness, news, newspapers, books, s. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Coherence fairness news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Coherence 1 also called uniformity 2 Thm 8 3 or consistency is a criterion for evaluating rules for fair division Coherence requires that the outcome of a fairness rule is fair not only for the overall problem but also for each sub problem Every part of a fair division should be fair 2 The coherence requirement was first studied in the context of apportionment In this context failure to satisfy coherence is called the new states paradox when a new state enters the union and the house size is enlarged to accommodate the number of seats allocated to this new state some other unrelated states are affected Coherence is also relevant to other fair division problems such as bankruptcy problems Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Handling ties 2 Coherence in apportionment 2 1 Non coherent methods the new state paradox 2 2 Coherent methods 2 3 Properties of coherent methods 3 Coherence in bankruptcy problems 4 Coherence in organ allocation 5 See also 6 ReferencesDefinition editThere is a resource to allocate denoted by h displaystyle h nbsp For example it can be an integer representing the number of seats in a house of representatives The resource should be allocated between some n displaystyle n nbsp agents For example these can be federal states or political parties The agents have different entitlements denoted by a vector t 1 t n displaystyle t 1 ldots t n nbsp For example ti can be the fraction of votes won by party i An allocation is a vector a 1 a n displaystyle a 1 ldots a n nbsp with i 1 n a i h displaystyle sum i 1 n a i h nbsp An allocation rule is a rule that for any h displaystyle h nbsp and entitlement vector t 1 t n displaystyle t 1 ldots t n nbsp returns an allocation vector a 1 a n displaystyle a 1 ldots a n nbsp An allocation rule is called coherent or uniform if for every subset S of agents if the rule is activated on the subset of the resource h S i S a i displaystyle h S sum i in S a i nbsp and on the entitlement vector t i i S displaystyle t i i in S nbsp then the result is the allocation vector a i i S displaystyle a i i in S nbsp That is when the rule is activated on a subset of the agents with the subset of resources they received the result for them is the same Handling ties edit In general an allocation rule may return more than one allocation in case of a tie In this case the definition should be updated Denote the allocation rule by M displaystyle M nbsp and Denote by M h t i i 1 n displaystyle M big h t i i 1 n big nbsp the set of allocation vectors returned by M displaystyle M nbsp on the resource h displaystyle h nbsp and entitlement vector t 1 t n displaystyle t 1 ldots t n nbsp The rule M displaystyle M nbsp is called coherent if the following holds for every allocation vector a i i 1 n M h t i i 1 n displaystyle a i i 1 n in M big h t i i 1 n big nbsp and any subset S of agents 3 Sec 4 a i i S M i S a i t i i S displaystyle a i i in S in M Big sum i in S a i t i i in S Big nbsp That is every part of every possible solution to the grand problem is a possible solution to the sub problem For every b i i S M i S a i t i i S displaystyle b i i in S in M Big sum i in S a i t i i in S Big nbsp and c i i S M i S a i t i i S displaystyle c i i notin S in M Big sum i notin S a i t i i notin S Big nbsp we have b i i S c i i S M h t i i 1 n displaystyle b i i in S c i i notin S in M big h t i i 1 n big nbsp That is if there are other tied solutions to the sub problems then putting them instead of the original solutions to the sub problems yield other tied solutions to the grand problem Coherence in apportionment editIn apportionment problems the resource to allocate is discrete for example the seats in a parliament Therefore each agent must receive an integer allocation Non coherent methods the new state paradox edit One of the most intuitive rules for apportionment of seats in a parliament is the largest remainder method LRM This method dictates that the entitlement vector should be normalized such that the sum of entitlements equals h displaystyle h nbsp the total number of seats to allocate Then each agent should get his normalized entitlement often called quota rounded down If there are remaining seats they should be allocated to the agents with the largest remainder the largest fraction of the entitlement Surprisingly this rule is not coherent As a simple example suppose h 5 displaystyle h 5 nbsp and the normalized entitlements of Alice Bob and Chana are 0 4 1 35 3 25 respectively Then the unique allocation returned by LRM is 1 1 3 the initial allocation is 0 1 3 and the extra seat goes to Alice since her remainder 0 4 is largest Now suppose that we activate the same rule on Alice and Bob alone with their combined allocation of 2 The normalized entitlements are now 0 4 1 75 2 0 45 and 1 35 1 75 2 1 54 Therefore the unique allocation returned by LRM is 0 2 rather than 1 1 This means that in the grand solution 1 1 3 the internal division between Alice and Bob does not follow the principle of largest remainders it is not coherent Another way to look at this non coherence is as follows Suppose that the house size is 2 and there are two states A B with quotas 0 4 1 35 Then the unique allocation given by LRM is 0 2 Now a new state C joins the union with quota 3 25 It is allocated 3 seats and the house size is increased to 5 to accommodate these new seats This change should not affect the existing states A and B In fact with the LRM the existing states are affected state A gains a seat while state B loses a seat This is called the new state paradox The new state paradox was actually observed in 1907 when Oklahoma became a state It was given a fair share 5 of seats and the total number of seats increased by that number from 386 to 391 members A recomputation of apportionment affected the number of seats because of other states New York lost a seat while Maine gained one 4 232 233 5 Coherent methods edit Every divisor method is coherent This follows directly from their description as picking sequences at each iteration the next agent to pick an item is the one with the highest ratio entitlement divisor Therefore the relative priority ordering between agents is the same even if we consider a subset of the agents Properties of coherent methods edit When coherency is combined with other natural requirements it characterizes a structured class of apportionment methods Such characterizations were proved by various authors 3 Sec 1 All results assume that the rules are homogeneous decent Hylland 6 Thm 3 10 proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is balanced and concordant then it is compatible with a divisor method Balinsky and Young 2 Thm 8 3 proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous and balanced then it is a rank index method a super class of divisor methods The opposite is also true among the anonymous and balanced methods a method is coherent if and only if it is a rank index method Balinsky and Young 2 Thm 8 4 p 147 proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous concordant and weakly exact then it is a divisor method Balinsky and Rachev 7 8 Thm 2 2 p 8 proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous order preserving weakly exact and complete then it is a divisor method Palomares Pukelsheim and Ramirez 3 proved that if a coherent decent apportionment rule is anonymous and balanced then it is house monotone if in addition it is also concordant then it is vote ratio monotone if in addition it is also strongly exact then it is compatible with a divisor method that is it returns a subset of the allocations returned by a divisor method if in addition it is also complete then it is a divisor method Young proved that the unique apportionment method that is a coherent extension of the natural two party apportionment rule of rounding to the nearest integer is the Webster method 9 49 50 190 10 Sub 9 10 Coherence in bankruptcy problems editIn bankruptcy problems the resource to allocate is continuous for example the amount of money left by a debtor Each agent can get any fraction of the resource However the sum of entitlements is usually larger than the total remaining resource The most intuitive rule for solving such problems is the proportional rule in which each agent gets a part of the resource proportional to his entitlement This rule is definitely coherent However it is not the only coherent rule the Talmudic rule of the contested garment can be extended to a coherent division rule 1 Sec 4 Coherence in organ allocation editIn most countries the number of patients waiting for an organ transplantation is much larger than the number of available organs Therefore most countries choose who to allocate an organ to by some priority ordering Surprisingly some priority orderings used in practice are not coherent For example one rule used by UNOS in the past was as follows 1 Sec 6 Each patient is assigned a personal score based on some medical data Each patient is assigned a bonus which is 10 times the fraction of patients who waited less than him The agents are prioritized by the sum of their score bonus Suppose the personal scores of some four patients A B C D are 16 21 20 23 Suppose their waiting times are A gt B gt C gt D Accordingly their bonuses are 10 7 5 5 2 5 So their sums are 26 28 5 25 25 5 and the priority order is B gt A gt D gt C Now after B receives an organ the personal scores of A C D remain the same but the bonuses change to 10 6 67 3 33 so the sums are 26 26 67 26 33 and the priority order is C gt D gt A This inverts the order between the three agents In order to have a coherent priority ordering the priority should be determined only by personal traits For example the bonus can be computed by the number of months in line rather than by the fraction of patients 11 See also editApportionment paradoxReferences edit a b c Balinski Michel 2005 06 01 What Is Just The American Mathematical Monthly 112 6 502 511 doi 10 1080 00029890 2005 11920221 ISSN 0002 9890 S2CID 32125041 a b c d Balinski Michel L Young H Peyton 2001 1982 Fair Representation Meeting the Ideal of One Man One Vote New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 02724 9 a b c Palomares Antonio Pukelsheim Friedrich Ramirez Victoriano 2016 09 01 The whole and its parts On the coherence theorem of Balinski and Young Mathematical Social Sciences 83 11 19 doi 10 1016 j mathsocsci 2016 06 001 ISSN 0165 4896 Stein James D 2008 How Math Explains the World A Guide to the Power of Numbers from Car Repair to Modern Physics New York Smithsonian Books ISBN 9780061241765 Caulfield Michael J November 2010 Apportioning Representatives in the United States Congress Paradoxes of Apportionment Convergence Mathematical Association of America doi 10 4169 loci003163 Hylland Aannud Allotment methods procedures for proportional distribution of indivisible entities 1978 Balinski Michel L Rachev Svetlozar T 1993 01 01 Rounding Proportions Rules of Rounding Numerical Functional Analysis and Optimization 14 5 6 475 501 doi 10 1080 01630569308816535 ISSN 0163 0563 Michel Balinsky and Svetlozar Rachev 1997 Rounding proportions methods of rounding Mathematical Scientist Volume 22 Issue 1 pages 1 26 Archived from the original on 2021 09 14 Retrieved 2021 09 14 Young Peyton H 1995 Equity in theory and practice Princeton University Press Pukelsheim Friedrich 2017 Pukelsheim Friedrich ed Securing System Consistency Coherence and Paradoxes Proportional Representation Apportionment Methods and Their Applications Cham Springer International Publishing pp 159 183 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 64707 4 9 ISBN 978 3 319 64707 4 retrieved 2021 09 20 Fleurbaey Marc April 1997 Equity In Theory and Practice H Peyton Young Princeton University Press 1994 238 xv pages Economics amp Philosophy 13 1 128 131 doi 10 1017 S0266267100004387 ISSN 1474 0028 S2CID 145232571 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coherence fairness amp oldid 1182417647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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