Social Utility Efficiency
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Social utility efficiency (SUE) is a measurement of the utilitarian performance of
voting methods Voting is a method by which a group, such as a meeting or an electorate, can engage for the purpose of making a collective decision or expressing an opinion usually following discussions, debates or election campaigns. Democracies elect holde ...
—how likely they are to elect the candidate who best represents the voters' preferences. It is also known as utilitarian efficiency, voter satisfaction index (VSI) or voter satisfaction efficiency (VSE).


Definition

Social utility efficiency is defined as the ratio between the
social utility In ethical philosophy, utilitarianism is a family of normative ethical theories that prescribe actions that maximize happiness and well-being for all affected individuals. Although different varieties of utilitarianism admit different charact ...
of the candidate who is actually elected by a given voting method and that of the candidate who would maximize social utility, where E[]is the expected value over many iterations of the sum of all voter utilities for a given candidate: \operatorname= \frac A voting method with 100% efficiency would always pick the candidate that maximizes voter utility. A method that chooses a winner randomly would have efficiency of 0%, and a (pathological) method that did worse than a random pick would have less than 0% efficiency. SUE is not only affected by the voting method, but is a function of the number of voters, number of candidates, and of any strategies used by the voters.


History

The concept was originally introduced as a system's "effectiveness" by
Robert J. Weber Robert J. Weber (born April, 1947) is the Frederic E. Nemmers Distinguished Professor of Decision Sciences at the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University.
in 1977, defined as: \operatorname=\lim_ \frac Where E is the expected social utility of the given candidate, n is the number of voters, and m is the number of candidates. He used a random society (
impartial culture Impartial culture (IC) or the culture of indifference is a probabilistic model used in social choice theory for analyzing ranked voting method rules. The model is understood to be unrealistic, and not a good representation of real-world voting beha ...
) model to analytically calculate the effectiveness of FPTP, two Approval variants, and
Borda Borda may refer to: *Qaṣīda al-Burda, a famous Sufi poem. * Borda (building) or borde, traditional cattle farmers' buildings in the Pyrenees, a barn, sheepfold, or stable * Places in India ** Borda, Goa, a town and suburb of the city of Margao ...
, as the number of voters approaches infinity. It was given the name "social utility efficiency" and extended to the more realistic
spatial model of voting In social choice theory, the spatial model of voting is used to simulate the behavior of voters in an election, either to explain voter behavior, or to estimate the likelihood of desirable or undesirable outcomes under different voting systems. Th ...
by
Samuel Merrill III Samuel Merrill III (born 1939) is an American mathematician and political scientist best known for his work on alternative voting systems, voter behavior, party competition, and arbitration. Merrill was raised in Bogalusa, Louisiana. He received h ...
in the 1980s, calculated statistically from random samples, with 25–201 voters and 2–10 candidates. This analysis included FPTP, Runoff,
IRV IRV or Irv or ''variant'', may refer to: *Instant-runoff voting, a type of ranked preferential voting counting method used in single-seat elections with more than two candidates *Irvine railway station, North Ayrshire, Scotland (National Rail stat ...
,
Coombs Coombs is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Anthony Coombs (politician) (born 1952), British politician * Anthony Coombs (Canadian football) (born 1992), Canadian football player * Bobby Coombs (1908–1991), America ...
, Approval, Black, and Borda (in increasing order of efficiency). (Merrill's model normalizes individual voter utility before finding the utility winner, while Weber's does not, so that Merrill considers all 2-candidate voting systems to have an SUE of 100%, decreasing with more candidates, while Weber considers them to have an effectiveness of \sqrt = 81.6%, with some systems increasing with more candidates.) In 2017, Jameson Quinn studied SUE under the name "voter satisfaction efficiency", using more complex and arguably more realistic parameters, examining a wider variety of scenarios and using a hierarchical cluster model of voter behavior. He analyzed a number of methods that had not been included in previous simulations, and his unpublished results found the best performers to be STAR voting, his own metho
3-2-1 voting
Ranked pairs, or Score voting, depending on the scenario tested. A 2023 paper then analyzed seven systems using impartial culture, 2D and 3D spatial model, and a clustered spatial model, with both honest and strategic voting, and found the best performers to be STAR, Smith/Minimax, and Approval Top Two. A similar metric, referred to as " Bayesian regret", measures the same property, but inverted and non-normalized. They are related by the formula: \operatorname(\text) = 1 - \frac where "random winner" refers to the hypothetical election method of choosing a candidate at random regardless of the opinions of the electorate (''not'' the
random ballot The random ballot, single stochastic vote, or lottery voting is an electoral system in which an election is decided on the basis of a single randomly selected ballot. It is closely related to random dictatorship; the latter is a general rule f ...
voting method, which is weighted towards candidates who receive more votes).


See also

*
Condorcet efficiency Condorcet efficiency is a measurement of the performance of voting methods. It is defined as the percentage of elections for which the Condorcet winner (the candidate who is preferred over all others in head-to-head races) is elected, provided ...
* Comparison of electoral systems


References

{{election-stub Voting theory Electoral systems