Abstract
Social distance games have been extensively studied as a coalition formation model where the utilities of agents in each coalition were captured using a utility function u that took into account distances in a given social network. In this paper, we consider a non-normalized score-based definition of social distance games where the utility function us̃ depends on a generic scoring vectors̃, which may be customized to match the specifics of each individual application scenario. As our main technical contribution, we establish the tractability of computing a welfare-maximizing partitioning of the agents into coalitions on tree-like networks, for every score-based function us̃. We provide more efficient algorithms when dealing with specific choices of us̃ or simpler networks, and also extend all of these results to computing coalitions that are Nash stable or individually rational. We view these results as a further strong indication of the usefulness of the proposed score-based utility function: even on very simple networks, the problem of computing a welfare-maximizing partitioning into coalitions remains open for the originally considered canonical function u.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 272-286 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Volume | 379 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 11 Jul 2023 |
Publication series
Name | Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science, EPTCS |
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Publisher | Open Publishing Association |
ISSN (Print) | 2075-2180 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:Acknowledgements. All authors are grateful for support from the OeAD bilateral Czech-Austrian WTZ-funding Programme (Projects No. CZ 05/2021 and 8J21AT021). Robert Ganian acknowledges support from the Austrian Science Foundation (FWF, project Y1329). Thekla Hamm also acknowledges support from FWF, project J4651-N. Dusˇan Knop, Sˇimon Schierreich, and Ondrˇej Suchy´ acknowledge the support of the Czech Science Foundation Grant No. 22-19557S. Sˇ imon Schierreich was additionally supported by the Grant Agency of the Czech Technical University in Prague, grant No. SGS23/205/OHK3/3T/18.
Publisher Copyright:
© R. Ganian, T. Hamm, D. Knop, S. Roy, Š. Schierreich & O. Suchý.