Talk:Vickrey–Clarke–Groves mechanism
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Notation
[edit]Section states "Our goal is to select an outcome that maximizes the sum of values, i.e.:
In other words, our social-choice function is utilitarian."
But utility is defined:
So the given function should be:
since is not necessarily zero - before tax. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 136.186.248.250 (talk) 01:54, 13 January 2018 (UTC)
Clark pivot rule sign of reversed?
[edit]The article defines as a sum paid to each agent, but the section on the Clark pivot rule seems to interpret it as a sum paid by each agent. As defined above, it is based on , a nonnegative value, but then adjusted by adding , which may be negative enough to make the final result negative. Indeed, for
we have
which can be at most 0 if is chosen as (otherwise, it must result in an even greater sum, making the final result negative). This suggests that , not the other way around, and further that , i.e. adding (the negative) rather than subtracting it. I propose that we reverse the sign of used when describing the Clark pivot rule. Rriegs (talk) 00:59, 26 April 2016 (UTC)
Limitations
[edit]There's little discussion of the limitations of this algorithm. I'm no expert but it appears:
- The algorithm assumes that people act rationally based on their own selfish interests, whereas in practice I suspect many people would not understand it well enough to behave 'correctly'. For example, this seems to often be the case on e-bay.
- It can be fooled by a small group of people being untruthful together?
- The outcome may not be socially optimal when the work people are expected to do choosing their valuations is taken into account - imagine doing this with a large population and numerous trivial decisions.
Perhaps someone more familiar with the subject could consider these points?