Decision making is challenging when there is more than one criterion to consider. In such cases, it is common to assign a goodness
score to each item as a weighted sum of its attribute values and
rank them accordingly. Clearly, the ranking obtained depends on
the weights used for this summation. Ideally, one would want the
ranked order not to change if the weights are changed slightly. We
call this property stability of the ranking. A consumer of a ranked
list may trust the ranking more if it has high stability. A producer of
a ranked list prefers to choose weights that result in a stable ranking, both to earn the trust of potential consumers and because a
stable ranking is intrinsically likely to be more meaningful.
In this paper, we develop a framework that can be used to assess
the stability of a provided ranking and to obtain a stable ranking
within an “acceptable” range of weight values (called “the region
of interest”). We address the case where the user cares about the
rank order of the entire set of items, and also the case where the user
cares only about the top-k items. Using a geometric interpretation,
we propose algorithms that produce stable rankings. In addition
to theoretical analyses, we conduct extensive experiments on real
datasets that validate our proposal.
History
Citation
Asudeh, A., Jagadish, H. V., Miklau, G.Stoyanovich, J. (2018). On Obtaining Stable Rankings. Proc. VLDB Endow., 12, 237-250.