Finance:Assignment valuation

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In economics, assignment valuation is a kind of a utility function on sets of items. It was introduced by Shapley[1] and further studied by Lehmann, Lehmann and Nisan,[2] who use the term OXS valuation (not to be confused with XOS valuation). Fair item allocation in this setting was studied by Benabbou, Chakraborty, Elkind, Zick and Igarashi.[3][4] Assignment valuations correspond to preferences of groups. In each group, there are several individuals; each individual attributes a certain numeric value to each item. The assignment-valuation of the group to a set of items S is the value of the maximum weight matching of the items in S to the individuals in the group.

The assignment valuations are a subset of the submodular valuations.

Example

Suppose there are three items and two agents who value the items as follows:

x y z
Alice: 5 3 1
George: 6 2 4.5

Then the assignment-valuation v corresponding to the group {Alice,George} assigns the following values:

  • v({x}) = 6 - since the maximum-weight matching assigns x to George.
  • v({y}) = 3 - since the maximum-weight matching assigns y to Alice.
  • v({z}) = 4.5 - since the maximum-weight matching assigns z to George.
  • v({x,y}) = 9 - since the maximum-weight matching assigns x to George and y to Alice.
  • v({x,z}) = 9.5 - since the maximum-weight matching assigns z to George and x to Alice.
  • v({y,z}) = 7.5 - since the maximum-weight matching assigns z to George and y to Alice.
  • v({x, y,z}) = 13.5 - since the maximum-weight matching assigns z to George and y to Alice.

References

  1. Shapley, Lloyd S. (1962). "Complements and substitutes in the opttmal assignment problem" (in en). Naval Research Logistics Quarterly 9 (1): 45–48. doi:10.1002/nav.3800090106. https://ideas.repec.org/a/wly/navlog/v9y1962i1p45-48.html. 
  2. Lehmann, Benny; Lehmann, Daniel; Nisan, Noam (2006-05-01). "Combinatorial auctions with decreasing marginal utilities" (in en). Games and Economic Behavior. Mini Special Issue: Electronic Market Design 55 (2): 270–296. doi:10.1016/j.geb.2005.02.006. ISSN 0899-8256. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S089982560500028X. 
  3. Benabbou, Nawal; Chakraborty, Mithun; Elkind, Edith; Zick, Yair (2019-08-10) (in en). Fairness Towards Groups of Agents in the Allocation of Indivisible Items. https://hal.sorbonne-universite.fr/hal-02155024. 
  4. Benabbou, Nawal; Chakraborty, Mithun; Igarashi, Ayumi; Zick, Yair (2020). Finding Fair and Efficient Allocations When Valuations Don't Add Up. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 12283. pp. 32–46. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-57980-7_3. ISBN 978-3-030-57979-1.