Allan Borodin, Joanna Drummond, Kate Larson, Omer Lev
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引用次数: 0
摘要
匹配市场的一个常见假设是双方都完全了解自己的偏好。然而,当参与者众多时,这可能既不现实也不可行。相反,代理人可能会掌握一些关于备选方案的部分信息(也许是随机信息),并会投入时间和资源来更好地了解不同选择的内在利益和权衡。利用住院医师与医院项目匹配的框架,我们研究了住院医师的策略行为,在这种情况下,医院会保留一份公开的住院医师总名单(即所有医院对所有住院医师都有一个相同的排名,例如,基于成绩的排名),住院医师必须决定与哪些医院面谈,然后再将他们的偏好提交给匹配机制。我们首先证明在非常一般的条件下存在纯策略均衡。然后,我们研究了当居民的偏好来自已知的 Mallows 分布时的情况。我们证明,只有当居民面试的项目数量较少时,才会出现同类均衡(k 个顶级居民面试 k 个顶级医院等)。令人惊讶的是,当住院医师可以面试多家医院的项目时,即使住院医师的偏好非常相似,这种均衡(甚至是较弱的同类面试概念)也不存在。对可能结果均衡的模拟表明,一些住院医师会采取 "到达/安全 "策略。
Natural interviewing equilibria in matching settings
A common assumption in matching markets is that both sides fully know their preferences. However, when there are many participants this may be neither realistic nor feasible. Instead, agents may have some partial (perhaps stochastic) information about alternatives and will invest time and resources to better understand the inherent benefits and tradeoffs of different choices. Using the framework of matching medical residents with hospital programs, we study strategic behaviour by residents in a setting where hospitals maintain a publicly known master list of residents (i.e., all hospitals have an identical ranking of all the residents, for example, based on grades) and residents have to decide with which hospitals to interview, before submitting their preferences to the matching mechanism. We first show the existence of pure strategy equilibrium under very general conditions. We then study the setting when residents’ preferences are drawn from a known Mallows distribution. We prove that assortative equilibrium (k top residents interview with k top hospitals, etc.) arises only when residents interview with a small number of programs. Surprisingly, such equilibria (or even weaker notions of assortative interviewing) do not exist when residents can interview with many hospital programs, even when residents’ preferences are very similar. Simulations on possible outcome equilibrium indicate that some residents will pursue a reach/safety strategy.
期刊介绍:
Social Choice and Welfare explores all aspects, both normative and positive, of welfare economics, collective choice, and strategic interaction. Topics include but are not limited to: preference aggregation, welfare criteria, fairness, justice and equity, rights, inequality and poverty measurement, voting and elections, political games, coalition formation, public goods, mechanism design, networks, matching, optimal taxation, cost-benefit analysis, computational social choice, judgement aggregation, market design, behavioral welfare economics, subjective well-being studies and experimental investigations related to social choice and voting. As such, the journal is inter-disciplinary and cuts across the boundaries of economics, political science, philosophy, and mathematics. Articles on choice and order theory that include results that can be applied to the above topics are also included in the journal. While it emphasizes theory, the journal also publishes empirical work in the subject area reflecting cross-fertilizing between theoretical and empirical research. Readers will find original research articles, surveys, and book reviews.Officially cited as: Soc Choice Welf