Tournament solution

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Template:Electoral systems A tournament solution is a function that maps an oriented complete graph to a nonempty subset of its vertices. It can informally be thought of as a way to find the "best" alternatives among all of the alternatives that are "competing" against each other in the tournament. Tournament solutions originate from social choice theory,[1][2][3][4] but have also been considered in sports competition, game theory,[5] multi-criteria decision analysis, biology,[6][7] webpage ranking,[8] and dueling bandit problems.[9]

In the context of social choice theory, tournament solutions are closely related to Fishburn's C1 social choice functions,[10] and thus seek to show who are the strongest candidates in some sense.

A tournament on 4 vertices: A={1,2,3,4}, ={(1,2),(1,4),(2,4),(3,1),(3,2),(4,3)}

Definition

A tournament graph T is a tuple (A,) where A is a set of vertices (called alternatives) and is a connex and asymmetric binary relation over the vertices. In social choice theory, the binary relation typically represents the pairwise majority comparison between alternatives.

A tournament solution is a function f that maps each tournament T=(A,) to a nonempty subset f(T) of the alternatives A (called the choice set[2]) and does not distinguish between isomorphic tournaments:

If h:AB is a graph isomorphism between two tournaments T=(A,) and T~=(B,~), then af(T)h(a)f(T~)

Examples

Common examples of tournament solutions are the:[1][2]

References

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