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Peer Selection with Friends and Enemies

Published: November 14, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2511.11157v1

By: Francis Bloch, Bhaskar Dutta, Marcin Dziubiński

Potential Business Impact:

Helps pick the best person when you don't know who's friends.

Business Areas:
Peer to Peer Collaboration

A planner wants to select one agent out of n agents on the basis of a binary characteristic that is commonly known to all agents but is not observed by the planner. Any pair of agents can either be friends or enemies or impartials of each other. An individual's most preferred outcome is that she be selected. If she is not selected, then she would prefer that a friend be selected, and if neither she herself or a friend is selected, then she would prefer that an impartial agent be selected. Finally, her least preferred outcome is that an enemy be selected. The planner wants to design a dominant strategy incentive compatible mechanism in order to be able choose a desirable agent. We derive sufficient conditions for existence of efficient and DSIC mechanisms when the planner knows the bilateral relationships between agents. We also show that if the planner does not know these relationships, then there is no efficient and DSIC mechanism and we compare the relative efficiency of two ``second-best'' DSIC mechanisms. Finally, we obtain sharp characterization results when the network of friends and enemies satisfies structural balance.

Country of Origin
🇫🇷 🇬🇧 United Kingdom, France

Page Count
32 pages

Category
Economics:
Theoretical Economics