Consistency in the probabilistic assignment model
From MaRDI portal
Publication:705901
DOI10.1016/j.jmateco.2003.10.004zbMath1117.90319OpenAlexW2117163556MaRDI QIDQ705901
Publication date: 16 February 2005
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Economics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmateco.2003.10.004
Related Items (15)
Reduction-consistency in collective choice problems ⋮ Consistent house allocation ⋮ On the consistency of random serial dictatorship ⋮ Review of the theory of stable matchings and contract systems ⋮ Strategy-proof and envy-free mechanisms for house allocation ⋮ Random scheduling with deadlines under dichotomous preferences ⋮ Strategy-proof and envy-free random assignment ⋮ Impossibilities for probabilistic assignment ⋮ Probabilistic assignment problem with multi-unit demands: a generalization of the serial rule and its characterization ⋮ Efficient assignment respecting priorities ⋮ House allocation with existing tenants: a characterization ⋮ A note on the assignment problem with uniform preferences ⋮ Entropy, desegregation, and proportional rationing ⋮ Consistency and its converse: an introduction ⋮ Ex-ante efficiency in assignments with seniority rights
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Ordinal efficiency and the polyhedral separating hyperplane theorem
- A simple random assignment problem with a unique solution
- Ordinal efficiency and dominated sets of assignments.
- Filling a multicolor urn: An axiomatic analysis.
- Consistency in house allocation problems
- On a conjecture by Gale about one-sided matching problems
- The proportional random allocation of indivisible units
- Two-Stage Lotteries without the Reduction Axiom
- Manipulation of Schemes that Mix Voting with Chance
- Straightforwardness of Game Forms with Lotteries as Outcomes
- Random Serial Dictatorship and the Core from Random Endowments in House Allocation Problems
- Fair Queuing and Other Probabilistic Allocation Methods
- A new solution to the random assignment problem.
This page was built for publication: Consistency in the probabilistic assignment model