
arXiv: 1104.2217
Lying in order to manipulate the Gale-Shapley matching algorithm has been studied by Dubins and Freedman (1981) and by Gale and Sotomayor (1985), and was shown to be generally more appealing to the proposed-to side (denoted as the women in Gale and Shapley's seminal paper (1962)) than to the proposing side (denoted as men there). It can also be shown that in the case of lying women, for every woman who is better off due to lying, there exists a man who is worse off.In this paper, we show that an even stronger dichotomy between the goals of the sexes holds, namely, if no woman is worse off then no man is better off, while a form of sisterhood between the lying and the "innocent" women also holds, namely, if none of the former is worse off, then neither is any of the latter. These results are robust: they generalize to the one-to-many variants of the algorithm and do not require the resulting matching to be stable (i.e. they hold even in out-of-equilibria situations). The machinery we develop in our proofs sheds new light on the structure of lying by women in the Gale-Shapley matching algorithm.This paper is based upon an undergraduate thesis (2007) by the first author.
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Matching models, matching, Special types of economic equilibria, unstable, Individual preferences, Computer Science - Computer Science and Game Theory, manipulation, out-of-equilibrium, FOS: Mathematics, Mathematics - Combinatorics, Combinatorics (math.CO), Computer Science and Game Theory (cs.GT)
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Matching models, matching, Special types of economic equilibria, unstable, Individual preferences, Computer Science - Computer Science and Game Theory, manipulation, out-of-equilibrium, FOS: Mathematics, Mathematics - Combinatorics, Combinatorics (math.CO), Computer Science and Game Theory (cs.GT)
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