Algorithmic and Hardness Results for Fundamental Fair Division Problems

dc.contributor.guideGhosh, Mrinal K and Barman, Siddharth
dc.coverage.spatial
dc.creator.researcherRathi, Nidhi
dc.date.accessioned2022-12-22T11:29:07Z
dc.date.available2022-12-22T11:29:07Z
dc.date.awarded2021
dc.date.completed2021
dc.date.registered
dc.description.abstractThe theory of fair division addresses the fundamental problem of dividing a set of resources among the participating agents in a satisfactory or meaningfully fair manner. This thesis examines the key computational challenges that arise in various settings of fair-division problems and complements the existential (and non-constructive) guarantees and various hardness results by way of developing efficient (approximation) algorithms and identifying computationally tractable instances. Our work in fair cake division develops several algorithmic results for allocating a divisible resource (i.e., the cake) among a set of agents in a fair/economically efficient manner. While strong existence results and various hardness results exist in this setup, we develop a polynomial-time algorithm for dividing the cake in an approximately fair and efficient manner. Furthermore, we identify an encompassing property of agents value densities (over the cake) the monotone likelihood ratio property (MLRP) that enables us to prove strong algorithmic results for various notions of fairness and (economic) efficiency. Our work in fair rent division develops a fully polynomial-time approximation scheme (FPTAS) for dividing a set of discrete resources (the rooms) and splitting the money (rents) among agents having general utility functions (continuous, monotone decreasing, and piecewise-linear), in a fair manner. Prior to our work, efficient algorithms for finding such solutions were known only for a specific set of utility functions. We com- plement the algorithmic results by proving that the fair rent division problem (under general utilities) lies in the intersection of the complexity classes, PPAD (Polynomial Parity Arguments on Directed graphs) and PLS (Polynomial Local Search). Our work respectively addresses fair division of rent, cake (divisible), and discrete (in- divisible) goods in a partial information setting....
dc.description.note
dc.format.accompanyingmaterialNone
dc.format.dimensions30 cm.
dc.format.extent212 p.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10603/430027
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisher.institutionMathematics
dc.publisher.placeBangalore
dc.publisher.universityIndian Institute of Science Bangalore
dc.relation
dc.rightsuniversity
dc.source.universityUniversity
dc.subject.keywordMathematics
dc.subject.keywordPhysical Sciences
dc.titleAlgorithmic and Hardness Results for Fundamental Fair Division Problems
dc.title.alternative
dc.type.degreePh.D.

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