6,362 research outputs found
On the complexity of nonlinear mixed-integer optimization
This is a survey on the computational complexity of nonlinear mixed-integer
optimization. It highlights a selection of important topics, ranging from
incomputability results that arise from number theory and logic, to recently
obtained fully polynomial time approximation schemes in fixed dimension, and to
strongly polynomial-time algorithms for special cases.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures; to appear in: Mixed-Integer Nonlinear
Optimization, IMA Volumes, Springer-Verla
Convex Combinatorial Optimization
We introduce the convex combinatorial optimization problem, a far reaching
generalization of the standard linear combinatorial optimization problem. We
show that it is strongly polynomial time solvable over any edge-guaranteed
family, and discuss several applications
Algorithms for the continuous nonlinear resource allocation problem---new implementations and numerical studies
Patriksson (2008) provided a then up-to-date survey on the
continuous,separable, differentiable and convex resource allocation problem
with a single resource constraint. Since the publication of that paper the
interest in the problem has grown: several new applications have arisen where
the problem at hand constitutes a subproblem, and several new algorithms have
been developed for its efficient solution. This paper therefore serves three
purposes. First, it provides an up-to-date extension of the survey of the
literature of the field, complementing the survey in Patriksson (2008) with
more then 20 books and articles. Second, it contributes improvements of some of
these algorithms, in particular with an improvement of the pegging (that is,
variable fixing) process in the relaxation algorithm, and an improved means to
evaluate subsolutions. Third, it numerically evaluates several relaxation
(primal) and breakpoint (dual) algorithms, incorporating a variety of pegging
strategies, as well as a quasi-Newton method. Our conclusion is that our
modification of the relaxation algorithm performs the best. At least for
problem sizes up to 30 million variables the practical time complexity for the
breakpoint and relaxation algorithms is linear
Zero-Convex Functions, Perturbation Resilience, and Subgradient Projections for Feasibility-Seeking Methods
The convex feasibility problem (CFP) is at the core of the modeling of many
problems in various areas of science. Subgradient projection methods are
important tools for solving the CFP because they enable the use of subgradient
calculations instead of orthogonal projections onto the individual sets of the
problem. Working in a real Hilbert space, we show that the sequential
subgradient projection method is perturbation resilient. By this we mean that
under appropriate conditions the sequence generated by the method converges
weakly, and sometimes also strongly, to a point in the intersection of the
given subsets of the feasibility problem, despite certain perturbations which
are allowed in each iterative step. Unlike previous works on solving the convex
feasibility problem, the involved functions, which induce the feasibility
problem's subsets, need not be convex. Instead, we allow them to belong to a
wider and richer class of functions satisfying a weaker condition, that we call
"zero-convexity". This class, which is introduced and discussed here, holds a
promise to solve optimization problems in various areas, especially in
non-smooth and non-convex optimization. The relevance of this study to
approximate minimization and to the recent superiorization methodology for
constrained optimization is explained.Comment: Mathematical Programming Series A, accepted for publicatio
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