Ribler, Randy L.Wise, JacksonKucher, KostiantynDiehl, AlexandraGillmann, Christina2024-05-212024-05-212024978-3-03868-258-5https://doi.org/10.2312/evp.20241078https://diglib.eg.org/handle/10.2312/evp20241078The fair division problem addresses the frequently encountered situation in which a set of resources must be fairly divided between two or more stakeholders. Dividing possessions after a divorce, assigning tasks to workers, and determining the terms of contracts or treaties are all examples of this problem. Algorithms have been developed to provide solutions that optimize for various metrics, but for many reasons, including the lack of agreement on what constitutes fairness, algorithms cannot provide a definitive result. Visualizations, rather than providing a single candidate solution, can be used effectively to browse the search space and generate a pool of candidate allocations that are most likely to be appealing to all parties. Candidate solutions can be used by stakeholders, either separately or cooperatively, as the basis for negotiation. We demonstrate prototype software that provides this capability for a set of indivisible resources that are divided between two stakeholders.Attribution 4.0 International LicenseCCS Concepts: Human-centered computing->Information visualization; Visual analyticsHuman centered computingInformation visualizationVisual analyticsA Visual Approach to Fair or Negotiated Resource Division10.2312/evp.202410783 pages