854 research outputs found
Tour recommendation for groups
Consider a group of people who are visiting a major touristic city, such as NY, Paris, or Rome. It is reasonable to assume that each member of the group has his or her own interests or preferences about places to visit, which in general may differ from those of other members. Still, people almost always want to hang out together and so the following question naturally arises: What is the best tour that the group could perform together in the city? This problem underpins several challenges, ranging from understanding people’s expected attitudes towards potential points of interest, to modeling and providing good and viable solutions. Formulating this problem is challenging because of multiple competing objectives. For example, making the entire group as happy as possible in general conflicts with the objective that no member becomes disappointed. In this paper, we address the algorithmic implications of the above problem, by providing various formulations that take into account the overall group as well as the individual satisfaction and the length of the tour. We then study the computational complexity of these formulations, we provide effective and efficient practical algorithms, and, finally, we evaluate them on datasets constructed from real city data
An evolutionary algorithm for online, resource constrained, multi-vehicle sensing mission planning
Mobile robotic platforms are an indispensable tool for various scientific and
industrial applications. Robots are used to undertake missions whose execution
is constrained by various factors, such as the allocated time or their
remaining energy. Existing solutions for resource constrained multi-robot
sensing mission planning provide optimal plans at a prohibitive computational
complexity for online application [1],[2],[3]. A heuristic approach exists for
an online, resource constrained sensing mission planning for a single vehicle
[4]. This work proposes a Genetic Algorithm (GA) based heuristic for the
Correlated Team Orienteering Problem (CTOP) that is used for planning sensing
and monitoring missions for robotic teams that operate under resource
constraints. The heuristic is compared against optimal Mixed Integer Quadratic
Programming (MIQP) solutions. Results show that the quality of the heuristic
solution is at the worst case equal to the 5% optimal solution. The heuristic
solution proves to be at least 300 times more time efficient in the worst
tested case. The GA heuristic execution required in the worst case less than a
second making it suitable for online execution.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Robotics and
Automation Letters (RA-L
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