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Dominant Resource Fairness with Meta-Types

Author

Listed:
  • Steven Yin
  • Shatian Wang
  • Lingyi Zhang
  • Christian Kroer

Abstract

Inspired by the recent COVID-19 pandemic, we study a generalization of the multi-resource allocation problem with heterogeneous demands and Leontief utilities. Unlike existing settings, we allow each agent to specify requirements to only accept allocations from a subset of the total supply for each resource. These requirements can take form in location constraints (e.g. A hospital can only accept volunteers who live nearby due to commute limitations). This can also model a type of substitution effect where some agents need 1 unit of resource A \emph{or} B, both belonging to the same meta-type. But some agents specifically want A, and others specifically want B. We propose a new mechanism called Dominant Resource Fairness with Meta Types which determines the allocations by solving a small number of linear programs. The proposed method satisfies Pareto optimality, envy-freeness, strategy-proofness, and a notion of sharing incentive for our setting. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to study this problem formulation, which improved upon existing work by capturing more constraints that often arise in real life situations. Finally, we show numerically that our method scales better to large problems than alternative approaches.

Suggested Citation

  • Steven Yin & Shatian Wang & Lingyi Zhang & Christian Kroer, 2020. "Dominant Resource Fairness with Meta-Types," Papers 2007.11961, arXiv.org, revised Aug 2021.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2007.11961
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/2007.11961
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Yisha Xiang & Jun Zhuang, 2016. "A medical resource allocation model for serving emergency victims with deteriorating health conditions," Annals of Operations Research, Springer, vol. 236(1), pages 177-196, January.
    2. Eric Budish, 2011. "The Combinatorial Assignment Problem: Approximate Competitive Equilibrium from Equal Incomes," Journal of Political Economy, University of Chicago Press, vol. 119(6), pages 1061-1103.
    3. Sanjay Mehrotra & Hamed Rahimian & Masoud Barah & Fengqiao Luo & Karolina Schantz, 2020. "A model of supply‐chain decisions for resource sharing with an application to ventilator allocation to combat COVID‐19," Naval Research Logistics (NRL), John Wiley & Sons, vol. 67(5), pages 303-320, August.
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    Cited by:

    1. Felix Brandt & Matthias Greger & Erel Segal-Halevi & Warut Suksompong, 2023. "Balanced Donor Coordination," Papers 2305.10286, arXiv.org.

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