Kemeny–Young method
The Kemeny–Young method is an electoral system that uses preferential ballots and pairwise comparison counts to identify the most popular choices in an election. It is a Condorcet method because if there is a Condorcet winner, it will always be ranked as the most popular choice. The Kemeny–Young method is also known as the Kemeny rule, VoteFair popularity ranking, the maximum likelihood method, and the median relation.
Borda countComparison of electoral systemsComputational social choiceCondorcet-Kemeny methodCondorcet KemenyCondorcet loser criterionCondorcet methodCondorcet winner criterionCondorcet–Kemeny methodCopeland's methodElectoral systemIndependence of clones criterionIndependence of irrelevant alternativesJohn G. KemenyKemeny's ruleKemeny-Young methodKendall tau distanceLater-no-harm criterionLater-no-help criterionMajority loser criterionPeyton YoungReversal symmetryUsual judgmentVoteFair ranking
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
primaryTopic
Kemeny–Young method
The Kemeny–Young method is an electoral system that uses preferential ballots and pairwise comparison counts to identify the most popular choices in an election. It is a Condorcet method because if there is a Condorcet winner, it will always be ranked as the most popular choice. The Kemeny–Young method is also known as the Kemeny rule, VoteFair popularity ranking, the maximum likelihood method, and the median relation.
has abstract
The Kemeny–Young method is an ...... thod, and the median relation.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
940,912,409
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
wikiPageUsesTemplate
hypernym
comment
The Kemeny–Young method is an ...... thod, and the median relation.
@en
label
Kemeny–Young method
@en