Fractionally Subadditive
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A set function is called fractionally subadditive (or XOS) if it is the maximum of several
additive set function In mathematics, an additive set function is a function mapping sets to numbers, with the property that its value on a union of two disjoint sets equals the sum of its values on these sets, namely, \mu(A \cup B) = \mu(A) + \mu(B). If this additivity ...
s. This valuation class was defined, and termed XOS, by Noam Nisan, in the context of combinatorial auctions. The term fractionally-subadditive was given by Uriel Feige.


Definition

There is a finite base set of items, M := \. There is a function v which assigns a number to each subset of M. The function v is called ''fractionally-subadditive'' (or XOS) if there exists a collection of set functions, \, such that: * Each a_j is additive, ''i.e.'', it assigns to each subset X\subseteq M, the sum of the values of the items in X. * The function v is the pointwise maximum of the functions a_j. I.e, for every subset X\subseteq M: :v(X) = \max_^l a_j(X)


Equivalent Definition

The name fractionally subadditive comes from the following equivalent definition: a set function v is ''fractionally subadditive'' if, for any S\subseteq M and any collection \_^k with \alpha_i > 0 and T_i\subseteq M such that \sum_ \alpha_i \ge 1 for all j\in S, we have v(S) \le \sum_^k \alpha_i v(T_i) .


Relation to other utility functions

Every
submodular set function In mathematics, a submodular set function (also known as a submodular function) is a set function whose value, informally, has the property that the difference in the incremental value of the function that a single element makes when added to an ...
is XOS, and every XOS function is a
subadditive set function In mathematics, a subadditive set function is a set function whose value, informally, has the property that the value of function on the union of two sets is at most the sum of values of the function on each of the sets. This is thematically related ...
. See also:
Utility functions on indivisible goods Some branches of economics and game theory deal with indivisible goods, discrete items that can be traded only as a whole. For example, in combinatorial auctions there is a finite set of items, and every agent can buy a subset of the items, but an i ...
.


References

{{reflist Utility function types