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Drawing a Map of Elections

4 April 2025
Stanisław Szufa
Niclas Boehmer
Robert Bredereck
Piotr Faliszewski
R. Niedermeier
P. Skowron
A. Slinko
Nimrod Talmon
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Abstract

Our main contribution is the introduction of the map of elections framework. A map of elections consists of three main elements: (1) a dataset of elections (i.e., collections of ordinal votes over given sets of candidates), (2) a way of measuring similarities between these elections, and (3) a representation of the elections in the 2D Euclidean space as points, so that the more similar two elections are, the closer are their points. In our maps, we mostly focus on datasets of synthetic elections, but we also show an example of a map over real-life ones. To measure similarities, we would have preferred to use, e.g., the isomorphic swap distance, but this is infeasible due to its high computational complexity. Hence, we propose polynomial-time computable positionwise distance and use it instead. Regarding the representations in 2D Euclidean space, we mostly use the Kamada-Kawai algorithm, but we also show two alternatives. We develop the necessary theoretical results to form our maps and argue experimentally that they are accurate and credible. Further, we show how coloring the elections in a map according to various criteria helps in analyzing results of a number of experiments. In particular, we show colorings according to the scores of winning candidates or committees, running times of ILP-based winner determination algorithms, and approximation ratios achieved by particular algorithms.

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@article{szufa2025_2504.03809,
  title={ Drawing a Map of Elections },
  author={ Stanisław Szufa and Niclas Boehmer and Robert Bredereck and Piotr Faliszewski and Rolf Niedermeier and Piotr Skowron and Arkadii Slinko and Nimrod Talmon },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.03809},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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