2013
DOI: 10.5539/jmr.v5n3p78
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Superadditivity and Subadditivity in Fair Division

Abstract: I examine the classic problem of fair division of a piecewise homogeneous good. Previous work developed algorithms satisfying various combinations of fairness notions (such as proportionality, envy-freeness, equitability, and Pareto-optimality). However, this previous work assumed that all utility functions are additive. Recognizing that additive functions accurately model utility only in certain situations, I investigate superadditive and subadditive utility functions. Next, I propose a new division protocol … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In particular, with non-additive valuations, the resulting division is not necessarily proportional. Mirchandani (2013) suggests a division protocol for non-additive valuations using non-linear programming. However, the protocol is practical only when the resource to divide is a collection of a small number of homogeneous components, where the only thing that matters is what fraction of each component is allocated to each agent.…”
Section: Non-additive Utilitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, with non-additive valuations, the resulting division is not necessarily proportional. Mirchandani (2013) suggests a division protocol for non-additive valuations using non-linear programming. However, the protocol is practical only when the resource to divide is a collection of a small number of homogeneous components, where the only thing that matters is what fraction of each component is allocated to each agent.…”
Section: Non-additive Utilitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…11 Previous papers about cake-cutting with non-additive utilities can be roughly divided to two kinds: some [12,43,65] handle general non-additive utilities but provide only pure existence results. Others [23,53,69] provide constructive division procedures but only for a 1-dimensional cake. Our approach is a middle ground between these extremes.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• Su (1999); Caragiannis et al (2011); Mirchandani (2013) provide practical division algorithms for nonadditive utilities, but they crucially assume that the cake is a 1-dimensional interval and cannot handle two-dimensional constraints.…”
Section: Challenges and Solutionsmentioning
confidence: 99%

Envy-Free Division of Land

Segal-Halevi,
Nitzan,
Hassidim
et al. 2016
Preprint