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Dive into the research topics where Flip Klijn is active.

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Featured researches published by Flip Klijn.


Journal of Economic Theory | 2009

Constrained School Choice

Guillaume Haeringer; Flip Klijn

Recently, several school districts in the US have adopted or consider adopting the Student-Optimal Stable mechanism or the Top Trading Cycles mechanism to assign children to public schools. There is evidence that for school districts that employ (variants of) the so-called Boston mechanism the transition would lead to efficiency gains. The first two mechanisms are strategy-proof, but in practice student assignment procedures typically impede a student to submit a preference list that contains all his acceptable schools. We study the preference revelation game where students can only declare up to a fixed number of schools to be acceptable. We focus on the stability and efficiency of the Nash equilibrium outcomes. Our main results identify rather stringent necessary and sufficient conditions on the priorities to guarantee stability or efficiency of either of the two mechanisms. This stands in sharp contrast with the Boston mechanism which has been abandoned in many US school districts but nevertheless yields stable Nash equilibrium outcomes.


Journal of Economic Theory | 2005

Stable matchings and preferences of couples

Bettina Klaus; Flip Klijn

Couples looking for jobs in the same labor market may cause instabilities. We determine a natural preference domain, the domain of weakly responsive preferences, that guarantees stability. Under a restricted unemployment aversion condition we show that this domain is maximal for the existence of stable matchings. We illustrate how small deviations from (weak) responsiveness, that model the wish of couples to be closer together, cause instability, even when we use a weaker stability notion that excludes myopic blocking. Our remaining results deal with various properties of the set of stable matchings for responsive couples markets, viz., optimality, filled positions, and manipulation.


Games and Economic Behavior | 2007

Paths to stability for matching markets with couples

Bettina Klaus; Flip Klijn

We study two-sided matching markets with couples and show that for a natural preference domain for couples, the domain of weakly responsive preferences, stable outcomes can always be reached by means of decentralized decision making. Starting from an arbitrary matching, we construct a path of matchings obtained from `satisfying blocking coalitions that yields a stable matching. Hence, we establish a generalization of Roth and Vande Vates (1990) result on path convergence to stability for decentralized singles markets. Furthermore, we show that when stable matchings exist, but preferences are not weakly responsive, for some initial matchings there may not exist any path obtained from `satisfying blocking coalitions that yields a stable matching.


Journal of Economic Theory | 2010

Stochastic stability for roommate markets

Bettina Klaus; Flip Klijn; Markus Walzl

We show that for any roommate market the set of stochastically stable matchings coincides with the set of absorbing matchings. This implies that whenever the core is non-empty (e.g., for marriage markets), a matching is in the core if and only if it is stochastically stable, i.e., stochastic stability is a characteristic of the core. Several solution concepts have been proposed to extend the core to all roommate markets (including those with an empty core). An important implication of our results is that the set of absorbing matchings is the only solution concept that is core consistent and shares the stochastic stability characteristic with the core.


International Journal of Game Theory | 2006

Median Stable Matching for College Admissions

Bettina Klaus; Flip Klijn

We give a simple and concise proof that so-called generalized median stable matchings are well-defined for college admissions problems. Furthermore, we discuss the fairness properties of median stable matchings and conclude with two illustrative examples of college admissions markets, the lattices of stable matchings, and the corresponding generalized median stable matchings.


Social Choice and Welfare | 2010

Smith and Rawls Share a Room: Stability and Medians

Bettina-Elisabeth Klaus; Flip Klijn

We consider one-to-one, one-sided matching (roommate) problems in which agents can either be matched as pairs or remain single. We introduce a so-called bi-choice graph for each pair of stable matchings and characterize its structure. Exploiting this structure we obtain as a corollary the “lone wolf” theorem and a decomposability result. The latter result together with transitivity of blocking leads to an elementary proof of the so-called stable median matching theorem, showing how the often incompatible concepts of stability (represented by the political economist Adam Smith) and fairness (represented by the political philosopher John Rawls) can be reconciled for roommate problems. Finally, we extend our results to two-sided matching problems.


International Game Theory Review | 2013

MATCHING WITH COUPLES: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY SURVEY

Péter Biró; Flip Klijn

This survey deals with two-sided matching markets where one set of agents (workers/residents) has to be matched with another set of agents (firms/hospitals). We first give a short overview of a selection of classical results. Then, we review recent contributions to a complex and representative case of matching with complementarities, namely matching markets with couples. We discuss contributions from computer scientists, economists, and game theorists.


Annals of Operations Research | 2005

On the Convexity of Precedence Sequencing Games

Herbert Hamers; Flip Klijn; Bas van Velzen

In this paper we study a class of cooperative sequencing games that arise from one-machine sequencing situations in which chain precedence relations are imposed on the jobs. We show that these sequencing games are convex if the initial order of the jobs is a concatenation of chains.


Mathematical Methods of Operations Research | 2006

Sequencing games without initial order

Flip Klijn; Estela Sánchez

In this note we study uncertainty sequencing situations, i.e., one-machine sequencing situations in which no initial order is specified. We associate cooperative games with these sequencing situations, study their core, and provide links with the classic sequencing games introduced by Curiel et al. (Eur J Oper Res 40:344–351, 1989). Moreover, we propose and characterize two simple cost allocation rules for uncertainty sequencing situations with equal processing times.


Social Choice and Welfare | 2012

Manipulability in Matching Markets: Conflict and Coincidence of Interests

Itai Ashlagi; Flip Klijn

We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing deferred acceptance mechanism in the two-sided one-to-one marriage market. We prove that if a group of women weakly successfully manipulates or employs truncation strategies, then all other women weakly benefit and all men are weakly harmed. We show that these results do not appropriately generalize to the many-to-one college admissions model.

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Marco Slikker

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Markus Walzl

University of Innsbruck

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Marc Vorsatz

National University of Distance Education

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Guillaume Haeringer

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Joana Pais

Technical University of Lisbon

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Caterina Calsamiglia

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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