Engineering
Engineering, 27.02.2020 21:46, hdjsjfjruejchhehd

Gerrymandering is the practice of carving up electoral districts in very careful ways so as to lead to outcomes that favor a particular political party. Recent court challenges to the practice have argued that through this Calculated redistricting, large numbers of voters are being effectively (and intentionally) disenfranchised. Computers, it turns out, have been implicated as the source of some of the "villainy" in the news coverage on this topic: Thanks to powerful software, gerrymandering has changed from an activity carried out by a bunch of people with maps, pencil, and paper into the industrial-strength process that it is today. Why is gerrymandering a computational problem? There are database issues involved in tracking voter demographics down to the level of individual streets and houses; and there are algorithmic issues involved in grouping voters into districts. Let’s think a bit about what these latter issues look like. Suppose we have a set of n precincts P1, P2 Pa, each containing m registered voters. We’re supposed to divide these precincts into two districts, each consisting of n/2 of the precincts. Now, for each precinct, we have information on how many voters are registered to each of two political parties. (Suppose, for simplicity, that every voter is registered to one of these two.) We’ll say that the set of precincts is susceptible to gerrymandering ff it is possible to perform the division into two districts in such a way that the same party holds a majority in both districts. Problem. Give an algorithm to determine whether a given set of precincts is susceptible to gerrymandering; the running time of your algorithm should be polynomial in n and m.

answer
Answers: 2

Other questions on the subject: Engineering

image
Engineering, 04.07.2019 18:10, settasav9641
Abrake has a normal braking torque of 2.8 kip in and heat-dissipating cast-iron surfaces whose mass is 40 lbm. suppose a load is brought to rest in 8.0 s from an initial angular speed of 1600 rev/min using the normal braking torque; estimate the temperature rise of the heat dissipating surfaces.
Answers: 3
image
Engineering, 04.07.2019 18:20, safiyabrowne7594
Ahe-xe mixture containing a 0.75 mole fraction of helium is used for cooling electronics in an avionics application. at a temperature of 300 k and atmospheric pressure, calculate the mass fraction of helium and the mass density, molar concentration and molecular weight of the mixture. if the cooling capacity is 10 l, what is the mass of the coolant?
Answers: 3
image
Engineering, 04.07.2019 18:20, samueltaye
Modern high speed trains do not have perpendicular expansion gaps where rails are joined end-to-end any more they are mostly welded together but what might happen if there was a spell of particularly hot weather that causes inspection of the tracks?
Answers: 1
image
Engineering, 04.07.2019 18:20, rbgrh9465
An open feedwater heater operates at steady state with liquid entering at inlet 1 with t? = 40°c and pl = 1 .2 mpa. water vapor att2-200°c and p2 = 1.2 mpa enters at inlet 2. saturated liquid water exits with a pressure of pa 1.2 mpa. neglect heat transfer with the surroundings and all kinetic and potential energy effects, determine the mass flow rate of steam at inlet 2 if the mass flow rate of liquid water at inlet 1 is given as 2 kg/s.
Answers: 3
Do you know the correct answer?
Gerrymandering is the practice of carving up electoral districts in very careful ways so as to lead...

Questions in other subjects: