It seems to me that the Chicken Dilemma must involve a candidate whom you'd approve or give max rating to if there weren't a Chicken Dilemma. ...if you didn't care if you were taken advantage of by the other faction.
So the giving of SFR, it seems to me, depends on the candidate qualifying for an approval. That would justify the inclination for the giving of SFR, or the amount of it, to be influenced by how much you like or dislike B. If the information for such a calculation (or even a guess for it) were available, then, the choice about SFR could be based on two things: 1. The probability that B qualifies for Approval, disregarding the Chicken Dilemma. 2. The probabilities of the various values possessed by the various quantities, in each of the various scenarios (each with its own SFR formula) regarding what kind of faction-size information is available, along with the probability of each kind of information-scenario. I don't think that that's even guessable. Maybe it's just a matter of subjective, intuitive feel. What I've occasionally done was to pick an information-scenario, and estimates for its numbers, choosing the scenario and corresponding formula that gives the SFR that intuitively agrees with how I like the candidate. So, really, I was just giving the candidate what I felt like giving hir, and justifying it with a formula chosen for that purpose. Not really objective. But the fact that the merit of the candidate justifiably influences the matter of how much SFR is awarded, justifies something that a Score advocate said at a website. He said that sincere rating can, &/or often does, approximate good strategy. When I read that, I agreed with it, because that has been my impression too. If B has more points than A, and is the one who can beat C, if anyone can, then give B a little boost, enough to close the gap between C, and a B who has so many votes that he's overtaken A. But not enough to be likely to bring B up to more than A, if B is less popular. Of course it might do that, but that's less likely if the SFR boost is small, requiring a small gap between B and A. But, as I said, that's a subjective judgement, and so how much you like or dislike B will influence the amount of that boost, for the reason I spoke of above. One might as well just guess, award by feel, since the information needed for a calculation would be just guesses anyway. Giving to a candidate what you feel you should give hir can be called sincere, even if you're doing for strategic purpose. In fact, I don't really know what other meaning "sincere ratings" would have. When a choice is that subjective, can you really say what is influencing it? I don't think you can say that you're giving ratings that are sincere in the sense that you know the candidates' utility for you, and be sure that you've separated the considerations and are awarding based entirely in proportion to utilities. Utilities are defined in terms of probabilities--and a question about which of two lotteries you'd choose. But, in a voting situation, knowing what you're inclined to do, and knowing why, are two different things. So, the statement about sincere rating maybe approximating good strategy makes sense. When it's said that strategic Score voting is at the extremes, that comes with a condition: ...that there isn't any communication among voters. But declaring how much you're going to give to a compromise candidate whose voters regard your candidate as a rival is a form of communication, and, because that is possible, strategic voting is no longer only at the extremes. Many of your ratings _will_ be extreme. SFR would just be for an otherwise approval-qualifying candidate with whose voters there is a Chicken Dilemma. ...Or sometimes when you don't know if a candidate qualifies for approval, as you sometimes don't. I used to say that Score has the disadvantage that strategic voters will take advantage of sincere voters, as if sincere and strategic voting were distinct and opposite. But the claim that I was making wasn't correct, if sincere rating is really intuitive SFR, or at least roughly approximates it, as that person at a website said, and as has been my impression too. I gave SFR to MJ in the minguo voting-systems poll, but rated all the other voting-systems at the extremes. That poll uses 0-10 Score. The inbetween rating for MJ was because, unlike unimproved Condorcet, IRV and Plurality, MJ meets FBC. And, MJ doesn't have the computation-intensive, fraud-vulnerable count that rank methods have. ...But MJ's tiebreaking bylaws make it a poor proposal, and its SFR is more complicated and difficult than that of Approval and Score. For those reasons, MJ seemed genuinely inbetween in merit, not obviously approvable or unapprovable, not obviously in an acceptable or unacceptable set. And, because preferrers of MJ could strategically 0-rate Approval and Score, I didn't want to co-operate with that, but didn't want to forgo MJ as a possible alternative to the much worse unimproved Condorcet or IRV.. If you equal top-rate a compromise in a poll, and then notice that the compromise has acquired more points than your favorite, then maybe you have been had. Someone else wasn't as co-operative as you were. It happens often in polls. Just because you give their candidate a good rating, doesn't mean they give one to your candidate. Mike Ossipoff ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
