preference functions
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Author(s):  
Svetlana Sergeevna Val'kova ◽  
Viktoriya Evgen'evna Stepanets ◽  
Elena Vitalievna Kiseleva

The article discusses the conditions for transshipment of cargo in the port and their impact on the efficiency of the production process. The efficiency of the port's production process for handling ships and wagons is largely determined by the options for work that are implemented in this process. The problem under consideration is due to the difference in the parameters of technological lines and the resources used for various options for handling cargo in the port. There is provided a comparative characteristic of options for handling cargo in the port. It has been established that the direct option of transshipment of cargo without additional delays of ships and wagons is the most preferable for the seaport, but its implementation in the production process of the port is very difficult and in some cases impossible. The main reasons for the impossibility of using direct options for overloading are indicated. The formula for estimating the costs of cargo passing through the ports is given and it is established in which case the preference is given to the direct transshipment option. For clarity, various schemes for the movement of goods in the port are given, which can be used for operational planning and in the allocation of port resources for handling vehicles. An express method is proposed for the operative selection of the option of cargo transshipment at a minimum of labor intensity. Restrictions have been established in the form of resources fixed at the transshipment complexes and the correspondence of the loading of the complex to its carrying capacity. The expediency of the priority allocation of resources for the processing of the vessel according to the direct option when forming preference functions for solving the problems of operational planning and regulation of the processing of vehicles in the port has been proved.


Author(s):  
Zack Fitzsimmons ◽  
Edith Hemaspaandra

The computational study of election problems generally focuses on questions related to the winner or set of winners of an election. But social preference functions such as Kemeny rule output a full ranking of the candidates (a consensus). We study the complexity of consensus-related questions, with a particular focus on Kemeny and its qualitative version Slater. The simplest of these questions is the problem of determining whether a ranking is a consensus, and we show that this problem is coNP-complete. We also study the natural question of the complexity of manipulative actions that have a specific consensus as a goal. Though determining whether a ranking is a Kemeny consensus is hard, the optimal action for manipulators is to simply vote their desired consensus. We provide evidence that this simplicity is caused by the combination of election system (Kemeny), manipulative action (manipulation), and manipulative goal (consensus). In the process we provide the first completeness results at the second level of the polynomial hierarchy for electoral manipulation and for optimal solution recognition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin M. Tinghitella ◽  
E. Dale Broder ◽  
James H. Gallagher ◽  
Aaron W. Wikle ◽  
David M. Zonana

AbstractInadvertent cues can be refined into signals through coevolution between signalers and receivers, yet the earliest steps in this process remain elusive. In Hawaiian populations of the Pacific field cricket, a new morph producing a novel and incredibly variable song (purring) has spread across islands. Here we characterize the current sexual and natural selection landscape acting on the novel signal by (1) determining fitness advantages of purring through attraction to mates and protection from a prominent deadly natural enemy, and (2) testing alternative hypotheses about the strength and form of selection acting on the novel signal. In field studies, female crickets respond positively to purrs, but eavesdropping parasitoid flies do not, suggesting purring may allow private communication among crickets. Contrary to the sensory bias and preference for novelty hypotheses, preference functions (selective pressure) are nearly flat, driven by extreme inter-individual variation in function shape. Our study offers a rare empirical test of the roles of natural and sexual selection in the earliest stages of signal evolution.


Mathematics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
pp. 1327
Author(s):  
Jukka Isohätälä ◽  
Alistair Milne ◽  
Donald Robertson

This paper investigates investment and output dynamics in a simple continuous time setting, showing that financing constraints substantially alter the relationship between net worth and the decisions of an optimizing firm. In the absence of financing constraints, net worth is irrelevant (the 1958 Modigliani–Miller irrelevance proposition applies). When incorporating financing constraints, a decline in net worth leads to the firm reducing investment and also output (when this reduces risk exposure). This negative relationship between net worth and investment has already been examined in the literature. The contribution here is providing new intuitive insights: (i) showing how large and long lasting the resulting non-linearity of firm behaviour can be, even with linear production and preferences; and (ii) highlighting the economic mechanisms involved—the emergence of shadow prices creating both corporate prudential saving and induced risk aversion. The emergence of such pronounced non-linearity, even with linear production and preference functions, suggests that financing constraints can have a major impact on investment and output; and this should be allowed for in empirical modelling of economic and financial crises (for example, the great depression of the 1930s, the global financial crisis of 2007–2008 and the crash following the Covid-19 pandemic of 2020).


2020 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 106462
Author(s):  
Ywh-Leh Chou ◽  
Te-Yu Lin ◽  
Jei-Zheng Wu ◽  
Cheng-Hung Wu

2020 ◽  
Vol 287 (1927) ◽  
pp. 20200127
Author(s):  
Aneesh P. H. Bose ◽  
Johannes Windorfer ◽  
Alex Böhm ◽  
Fabrizia Ronco ◽  
Adrian Indermaur ◽  
...  

Many animals can modify the environments in which they live, thereby changing the selection pressures they experience. A common example of such niche construction is the use, creation or modification of environmental resources for use as nests or shelters. Because these resources often have correlated structural elements, it can be difficult to disentangle the relative contribution of these elements to resource choice, and the preference functions underlying niche-construction behaviour remain hidden. Here, we present an experimental paradigm that uses 3D scanning, modelling and printing to create replicas of structures that differ with respect to key structural attributes. We show that a niche-constructing, shell-dwelling cichlid fish, Neolamprologus multifasciatus , has strong open-ended preference functions for exaggerated shell replicas. Fish preferred shells that were fully intact and either enlarged, lengthened or had widened apertures. Shell intactness was the most important structural attribute, followed by shell length, then aperture width. We disentangle the relative roles of different shell attributes, which are tightly correlated in the wild, but nevertheless differentially influence shelter choice and therefore niche construction in this species. We highlight the broad utility of our approach when compared with more traditional methods (e.g. two-choice tasks) for studying animal decision-making in a range of contexts.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Akram ◽  
Shumaiza ◽  
José Alcantud

The Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) is arguably the most popular and factual approach for computing the weights of attributes in the multi-attribute decision-making environment. The Preference Ranking Organization Method for Enrichment of Evaluations (PROMETHEE) is an outranking family of multi-criteria decision-making techniques for evaluating a finite set of alternatives, that relies on multiple and inconsistent criteria. One of its main advantages is the variety of admissible preference functions that can measure the differences between alternatives, in response to the type and nature of the criteria. This research article studies a version of the PROMETHEE technique that encompasses multipolar assessments of the performance of each alternative (relative to the relevant criteria). As is standard practice, first we resort to the AHP technique in order to quantify the normalized weights of the attributes by the pairwise comparison of criteria. Afterwards the m-polar fuzzy PROMETHEE approach is used to rank the alternatives on the basis of conflicting criteria. Six types of generalized criteria preference functions are used to measure the differences or deviations of every pair of alternatives. A partial ranking of alternatives arises by computing the positive and negative outranking flows of alternatives, which is known as PROMETHEE I. Furthermore, a complete ranking of alternatives is achieved by the inspection of the net flow of alternatives, and this is known as PROMETHEE II. Two comparative analysis are performed. A first study checks the impact of different types of preference functions. It considers the usual criterion preference function for all criteria. In addition, we compare the technique that we develop with existing multi-attribute decision-making methods.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aneesh P. H. Bose ◽  
Johannes Windorfer ◽  
Alex Böhm ◽  
Fabrizia Ronco ◽  
Adrian Indermaur ◽  
...  

AbstractMany animals can modify the environments in which they live, thereby changing the selection pressures they experience. A common example of such niche-construction is the use, creation, or modification of environmental resources for use as nests or shelters. Because these resources often have correlated structural elements, it can be difficult to disentangle the relative contribution of these elements to resource choice, and the preference functions underlying niche-construction behaviour remain hidden. Here, we present an experimental paradigm that uses 3D-scanning, -modelling, and -printing to create replicas of structures that differ with respect to key structural attributes. We show that a niche-constructing, shelldwelling cichlid fish, Neolamprologus multifasciatus, has strong open-ended preference functions for exaggerated shell replicas. Fish preferred shells that were fully intact and either enlarged, lengthened, or had widened apertures. Shell intactness was the most important structural attribute, followed by shell length, then aperture width. We disentangle the relative roles of different shell attributes, which are tightly correlated in the wild, but nevertheless differentially influence shelter choice and therefore niche construction in this species. We highlight the broad utility of our approach when compared to more traditional methods (e.g. two-choice tasks) for studying animal decision-making in a range of contexts.


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