Dancing Matters March 2023 adventure choices

Winners: AGUA by Pina Bausch (BAM), Streb's Home Seas (SLAM)

Rounds Slider

R1R2R3R4R5R6
AGUA by Pina Bausch (BAM)30303030314
Streb's Home Seas (SLAM)40404040404
BlackDance Stories (NYPL)10101010101
Flamenco Fest (CityCenter10101010101
Mvmnt Rsrch @ Judson10101010101
Ballet West (Guggenheim)101010101-10
ESTROGENIUS FESTIVAL00000000000
Kinstillatory (Abrons)00000000000
Night Keeper @ Chclt Fact00000000000
 
Total111111111111
Inactive Ballots0.000000.000000.000000.000000.000000.00000
  • Use of mathematical tie-breaker formula - weights voter preferences from before rounds are calculated
  • Use of random tie-breaker – because mathematical tie-breaker formula resulted in a tie
1st ch2nd ch3rd ch4th ch5th ch6th ch7th ch8th ch9th ch
AGUA by Pina Bausch (BAM)330201000
BlackDance Stories (NYPL)131011020
ESTROGENIUS FESTIVAL011031211
Flamenco Fest (CityCenter111113001
Kinstillatory (Abrons)000520111
Mvmnt Rsrch @ Judson112110031
Night Keeper @ Chclt Fact003000501
Streb's Home Seas (SLAM)411001011
Ballet West (Guggenheim)101112112
Total Choices1110101099998

RCV123 on-line system handles ties among candidates facing elimination differently than any official RCV systems. (Other than tie-breaking, we use the WIGM RCV system that is the standard counting method.)

We vary from official RCV for tie-breaking because in elections with thousands or hundreds of thousands of voters, ties are very unlikely. But our mission is to make RCV helpful to anyone who wants to make a group decision – including smaller groups with perhaps only 25 voters in a classroom or small civic organization. In a small group election with five candidates and 20 voters, for example, there are very likely to be several ties as the rounds progress.

Official RCV uses random chance to settle any ties. We believe it would be unsatisfying for small voting groups to find that much of the outcome was determined by random chance.

So we developed a unique tie-breaking system that calculates a single number for each candidate based on their vote totals and the choice column they are in. The candidate with the highest tie-breaking number wins that tie. If that tie-breaker number winds up in a tie, then RCV123 resorts to random chance.

Each first-choice vote is worth 100, and each subsequent choice is worth 2/3 (.67) of the previous choice on a ballot. Then all the votes and weighting for each candidate in each column are totaled to determine an overall tie-breaker number. So in our method, for example, three 2nd place votes are worth very slightly more than two 1st place votes. But it would take 37 10th place votes to have the same weight as one 1st place vote.

Our tie-breaking method looks at all choice data from every ballot. This is different from the rounds of counting - which only looks at the data from each round as it is calculated. For example, in actual rounds of counting, a candidate with zero first-choice votes will be eliminated right away, and any 2nd or 5th or 10th place votes they may have does not matter at all.

If two candidates facing elimination have a tie, and have identical tie-breaker numbers, then RCV123 will use random chance to decide. We create a grid of randomly decided, head-to-head tie-breaking match-ups for each combination of candidates. That grid can be found on the results page of any election.

The use of the mathematical tie breakers will be noted in election results with a blue rectangle over vote totals in that round for the candidates involved. The use of the last-resort, random tie breaker will be noted by the color green.

We believe our tie-breaking system is a good compromise between not weighting the choice column of votes at all, and excessively weighting one choice column vs. another immediately adjacent.

This table shows the primary tie-breaker calculation. It starts with the raw ballot data from before any rounds were tabulated.

The total of all voter 1st choices for a candidate is multiplied by 100. Each successive set of total choices for a candidate ( 2nd, 3rd, 4th etc.) is assigned 2/3 (.67) of the weight given to the previous column of choice totals. Then all the columns are added together to arrive at a tie-breaker number for each candidate.

1st chx 1.002nd chx 0.673rd chx 0.454th chx 0.305th chx 0.206th chx 0.147th chx 0.098th chx 0.069th chx 0.04Candidate Tie-Breaker Number
AGUA by Pina Bausch (BAM)33.0032.0100.0020.6000.0010.1400.0000.0000.005.75
BlackDance Stories (NYPL)11.0032.0110.4500.0010.2010.1400.0020.1200.003.92
ESTROGENIUS FESTIVAL00.0010.6710.4500.0030.6010.1420.1810.0610.042.14
Flamenco Fest (CityCenter11.0010.6710.4510.3010.2030.4100.0000.0010.043.07
Kinstillatory (Abrons)00.0000.0000.0051.5020.4000.0010.0910.0610.042.10
Mvmnt Rsrch @ Judson11.0010.6720.9010.3010.2000.0000.0030.1810.043.29
Night Keeper @ Chclt Fact00.0000.0031.3500.0000.0000.0050.4500.0010.041.84
Streb's Home Seas (SLAM)44.0010.6710.4500.0000.0010.1400.0010.0610.045.36
Ballet West (Guggenheim)11.0000.0010.4510.3010.2020.2710.0910.0620.082.45
Total Choices1110101099998

In the event our primary tie-breaking system can’t settle a tie among candidates with exactly the same number of votes and set of choice preferences, we have the computer generate a random list of all candidates. That order determines who will win any ties of the primary system.

Order
AGUA by Pina Bausch (BAM)5
BlackDance Stories (NYPL)1
ESTROGENIUS FESTIVAL6
Flamenco Fest (CityCenter8
Kinstillatory (Abrons)2
Mvmnt Rsrch @ Judson4
Night Keeper @ Chclt Fact3
Streb's Home Seas (SLAM)7
Ballet West (Guggenheim)9