Center for Algorithms and Theory of Computation

CS 269S, Winter 2019: Theory Seminar
Bren Hall, Room 1423, 1pm


March 15, 2019:

Stable fractional matchings

Speaker: Hadi Khodabandeh

Abstract: We study a generalization of the classical stable matching problem that allows for cardinal preferences (as opposed to ordinal) and fractional matchings (as opposed to integral). After observing that, in this cardinal setting, stable fractional matchings can have much higher social welfare than stable integral ones, our goal is to understand the computational complexity of finding an optimal (i.e., welfare-maximizing) or nearly optimal stable fractional matching. We present simple approximation algorithms for this problem with weak welfare guarantees and, rather unexpectedly, we furthermore show that achieving better approximations is hard. This computational hardness persists even for approximate stability. To the best of our knowledge, these are the first computational complexity results for stable fractional matchings. En route to these results, we provide a number of structural observations.

Based on a paper by Ioannis Caragiannis, Aris Filos-Ratsikas, Panagiotis Kanellopoulos, Rohit Vaish https://arxiv.org/pdf/1902.06698.pdf