Voting in Social Network
Source:
CIKM (2009)
Abstract:
A voting system is a set of rules that a community adopts to take
collective decisions. In this paper we study voting systems for a
particular kind of community: electronically mediated social networks.
In particular, we focus on delegative democracy (a.k.a. proxy
voting) that has recently received increased interest for its ability to
combine the benefits of direct and representative systems, and that
seems also perfectly suited for electronically mediated social networks.
In such a context, we consider a voting system in which
users can only express their preference for one among the people
they are explicitly connected with, and this preference can be propagated
transitively, using an attenuation factor.
We present this system and we study its properties. We also take
into consideration the problem of missing votes, which is particularly
relevant in online networks, as some recent case shows. Our
experiments on real-world networks provide interesting insight into
the significance and stability of the results obtained with the suggested
voting system.