SVVAMP: Simulator of Various Voting Algorithms in Manipulating Populations

Authors: François Durand, Fabien Mathieu, Ludovic Noirie

AAAI 2016 | Conference PDF | Archive PDF | Plain Text | LLM Run Details

Reproducibility Variable Result LLM Response
Research Type Experimental SVVAMP is designed to run large scale experiments on regular computers. To give an order of magnitude, a full study of all voting systems on 10 000 populations drawn with the Spheroid culture, with V = 33 voters and C = 5 candidates takes less than one half-hour on a 2.3 GHz personal laptop.
Researcher Affiliation Collaboration Franc ois Durand Paris Dauphine University francois.durand@dauphine.fr Fabien Mathieu and Ludovic Noirie Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs France {fabien.mathieu, ludovic.noirie}@alcatel-lucent.com
Pseudocode No The paper does not contain structured pseudocode or algorithm blocks (clearly labeled algorithm sections or code-like formatted procedures).
Open Source Code Yes SVVAMP is a free software, under GNU General Public License version 3. Its documentation includes installation procedure, tutorials, reference guide and instructions for new contributors. It is available at: https://svvamp.readthedocs.org.
Open Datasets Yes SVVAMP can read simple CSV files containing the utilities of the population or files using the Pref Lib format (Mattei and Walsh 2013).
Dataset Splits No The paper describes generating or importing populations for simulations but does not specify training, validation, or test dataset splits for model training or evaluation in the context of machine learning reproducibility.
Hardware Specification Yes To give an order of magnitude, a full study of all voting systems on 10 000 populations drawn with the Spheroid culture, with V = 33 voters and C = 5 candidates takes less than one half-hour on a 2.3 GHz personal laptop.
Software Dependencies No The paper mentions 'SVVAMP, a Python package' but does not specify exact version numbers for Python or any other software dependencies or libraries.
Experiment Setup Yes To give an order of magnitude, a full study of all voting systems on 10 000 populations drawn with the Spheroid culture, with V = 33 voters and C = 5 candidates takes less than one half-hour on a 2.3 GHz personal laptop.