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AAAI 2025

February 28, 2025

Philadelphia, United States

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fair division

We study the fair allocation of indivisible goods among a group of agents, aiming to limit the envy between any two agents. The central open problem in this literature, which has proven to be extremely challenging, is regarding the existence of an EFX allocation, i.e., an allocation such that any envy from some agent i toward another agent j would vanish if we were to remove any single good from the bundle allocated to j. When the agents’ valuations are additive, which has been the main focus of prior works, Chaudhury et al. 2024 were able to show that an EFX allocation is guaranteed to exist for all instances involving up to three agents. However, the existence of EFX allocations for four agents remains open. In this paper we contribute to this literature by studying a relaxations of EFX and extending the existence guarantees to instances with more than three agents. Specifically, we focus on the existence of EF2X allocations, which ensure that any envy toward some agent vanishes if any two of the goods allocated to that agent were to be removed. Our main result shows that EF2X allocations are guaranteed to exist for any instance with four agents, even for the class of cancelable valuations, which is more general than additive. Furthermore, for instances involving three agents, we provide an algorithm that computes an EF2X allocation in polynomial time, in contrast to EFX for which the fastest known algorithm for three agents is only pseudo-polynomial.

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