In
utility theory, the responsive set (RS) extension is an extension of a
preference-relation on individual items, to a partial preference-relation of item-bundles.
Example
Suppose there are four items:
. A person states that he ranks the items according to the following
total order:
:
(i.e., z is his best item, then y, then x, then w).
Assuming the items are
independent goods, one can deduce that:
:
– the person prefers his two best items to his two worst items;
:
– the person prefers his best and third-best items to his second-best and fourth-best items.
But, one cannot deduce anything about the bundles
; we do not know which of them the person prefers.
The RS extension of the ranking
is a
partial order on the bundles of items, that includes all relations that can be deduced from the item-ranking and the independence assumption.
Definitions
Let
be a set of objects and
a total order on
.
The RS extension of
is a partial order on
. It can be defined in several equivalent ways.
Responsive set (RS)
The original RS extension
is constructed as follows. For every bundle
, every item
and every item
, take the following relations:
*
(- adding an item improves the bundle)
*If
then
(- replacing an item with a better item improves the bundle).
The RS extension is the
transitive closure of these relations.
Pairwise dominance (PD)
The PD extension is based on a ''pairing'' of the items in one bundle with the items in the other bundle.
Formally,
if-and-only-if there exists an
Injective function
In mathematics, an injective function (also known as injection, or one-to-one function) is a function that maps distinct elements of its domain to distinct elements; that is, implies . (Equivalently, implies in the equivalent contrapositiv ...
from
to
such that, for each
,
.
Stochastic dominance (SD)
The SD extension (named after
stochastic dominance
Stochastic dominance is a partial order between random variables. It is a form of stochastic ordering. The concept arises in decision theory and decision analysis in situations where one gamble (a probability distribution over possible outcomes, ...
) is defined not only on discrete bundles but also on fractional bundles (bundles that contains fractions of items). Informally, a bundle Y is SD-preferred to a bundle X if, for each item z, the bundle Y contains at least as many objects, that are at least as good as z, as the bundle X.
Formally,
iff, for every item
:
:
where