497 research outputs found
Exact Solution Methods for the -item Quadratic Knapsack Problem
The purpose of this paper is to solve the 0-1 -item quadratic knapsack
problem , a problem of maximizing a quadratic function subject to two
linear constraints. We propose an exact method based on semidefinite
optimization. The semidefinite relaxation used in our approach includes simple
rank one constraints, which can be handled efficiently by interior point
methods. Furthermore, we strengthen the relaxation by polyhedral constraints
and obtain approximate solutions to this semidefinite problem by applying a
bundle method. We review other exact solution methods and compare all these
approaches by experimenting with instances of various sizes and densities.Comment: 12 page
Stochastic Budget Optimization in Internet Advertising
Internet advertising is a sophisticated game in which the many advertisers
"play" to optimize their return on investment. There are many "targets" for the
advertisements, and each "target" has a collection of games with a potentially
different set of players involved. In this paper, we study the problem of how
advertisers allocate their budget across these "targets". In particular, we
focus on formulating their best response strategy as an optimization problem.
Advertisers have a set of keywords ("targets") and some stochastic information
about the future, namely a probability distribution over scenarios of cost vs
click combinations. This summarizes the potential states of the world assuming
that the strategies of other players are fixed. Then, the best response can be
abstracted as stochastic budget optimization problems to figure out how to
spread a given budget across these keywords to maximize the expected number of
clicks.
We present the first known non-trivial poly-logarithmic approximation for
these problems as well as the first known hardness results of getting better
than logarithmic approximation ratios in the various parameters involved. We
also identify several special cases of these problems of practical interest,
such as with fixed number of scenarios or with polynomial-sized parameters
related to cost, which are solvable either in polynomial time or with improved
approximation ratios. Stochastic budget optimization with scenarios has
sophisticated technical structure. Our approximation and hardness results come
from relating these problems to a special type of (0/1, bipartite) quadratic
programs inherent in them. Our research answers some open problems raised by
the authors in (Stochastic Models for Budget Optimization in Search-Based
Advertising, Algorithmica, 58 (4), 1022-1044, 2010).Comment: FINAL versio
On the sum-of-squares degree of symmetric quadratic functions
We study how well functions over the boolean hypercube of the form
can be approximated by sums of squares of low-degree
polynomials, obtaining good bounds for the case of approximation in
-norm as well as in -norm. We describe three
complexity-theoretic applications: (1) a proof that the recent breakthrough
lower bound of Lee, Raghavendra, and Steurer on the positive semidefinite
extension complexity of the correlation and TSP polytopes cannot be improved
further by showing better sum-of-squares degree lower bounds on
-approximation of ; (2) a proof that Grigoriev's lower bound on
the degree of Positivstellensatz refutations for the knapsack problem is
optimal, answering an open question from his work; (3) bounds on the query
complexity of quantum algorithms whose expected output approximates such
functions.Comment: 33 pages. Second version fixes some typos and adds reference
Recovery of binary sparse signals from compressed linear measurements via polynomial optimization
The recovery of signals with finite-valued components from few linear
measurements is a problem with widespread applications and interesting
mathematical characteristics. In the compressed sensing framework, tailored
methods have been recently proposed to deal with the case of finite-valued
sparse signals. In this work, we focus on binary sparse signals and we propose
a novel formulation, based on polynomial optimization. This approach is
analyzed and compared to the state-of-the-art binary compressed sensing
methods
Algorithm Engineering in Robust Optimization
Robust optimization is a young and emerging field of research having received
a considerable increase of interest over the last decade. In this paper, we
argue that the the algorithm engineering methodology fits very well to the
field of robust optimization and yields a rewarding new perspective on both the
current state of research and open research directions.
To this end we go through the algorithm engineering cycle of design and
analysis of concepts, development and implementation of algorithms, and
theoretical and experimental evaluation. We show that many ideas of algorithm
engineering have already been applied in publications on robust optimization.
Most work on robust optimization is devoted to analysis of the concepts and the
development of algorithms, some papers deal with the evaluation of a particular
concept in case studies, and work on comparison of concepts just starts. What
is still a drawback in many papers on robustness is the missing link to include
the results of the experiments again in the design
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