A measure of distance between judgment sets

C Duddy, A Piggins - Social Choice and Welfare, 2012 - Springer
C Duddy, A Piggins
Social Choice and Welfare, 2012Springer
In the literature on judgment aggregation, an important open question is how to measure the
distance between any two judgment sets. This is relevant for issues of social choice: if two
individuals hold different beliefs then we might want to find a compromise that lies
somewhere between them. We propose a set of axioms that determine a measure of
distance uniquely. This measure differs from the widely used Hamming metric. The
difference between Hamming's metric and ours boils down to one axiom. Given judgment …
Abstract
In the literature on judgment aggregation, an important open question is how to measure the distance between any two judgment sets. This is relevant for issues of social choice: if two individuals hold different beliefs then we might want to find a compromise that lies somewhere between them. We propose a set of axioms that determine a measure of distance uniquely. This measure differs from the widely used Hamming metric. The difference between Hamming’s metric and ours boils down to one axiom. Given judgment sets A and B, this axiom says that if the propositions in jointly imply that the propositions in AB share the same truth value, then the disagreement between A and B over those propositions in AB should be counted as a single disagreement. We consider the application of our metric to judgment aggregation, and also use the metric to measure the distance between preference rankings.
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