298 research outputs found

    Stochastic local search: a state-of-the-art review

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    The main objective of this paper is to provide a state-of-the-art review, analyze and discuss stochastic local search techniques used for solving hard combinatorial problems. It begins with a short introduction, motivation and some basic notation on combinatorial problems, search paradigms and other relevant features of searching techniques as needed for background. In the following a brief overview of the stochastic local search methods along with an analysis of the state-of-the-art stochastic local search algorithms is given. Finally, the last part of the paper present and discuss some of the most latest trends in application of stochastic local search algorithms in machine learning, data mining and some other areas of science and engineering. We conclude with a discussion on capabilities and limitations of stochastic local search algorithms

    Scheduling flow lines with buffers by ant colony digraph

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    This work starts from modeling the scheduling of n jobs on m machines/stages as flowshop with buffers in manufacturing. A mixed-integer linear programing model is presented, showing that buffers of size n - 2 allow permuting sequences of jobs between stages. This model is addressed in the literature as non-permutation flowshop scheduling (NPFS) and is described in this article by a disjunctive graph (digraph) with the purpose of designing specialized heuristic and metaheuristics algorithms for the NPFS problem. Ant colony optimization (ACO) with the biologically inspired mechanisms of learned desirability and pheromone rule is shown to produce natively eligible schedules, as opposed to most metaheuristics approaches, which improve permutation solutions found by other heuristics. The proposed ACO has been critically compared and assessed by computation experiments over existing native approaches. Most makespan upper bounds of the established benchmark problems from Taillard (1993) and Demirkol, Mehta, and Uzsoy (1998) with up to 500 jobs on 20 machines have been improved by the proposed ACO

    Nonpermutation flow line scheduling by ant colony optimization

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    A flow line is a conventional manufacturing system where all jobs must be processed on all machines with the same operation sequence. Line buffers allow nonpermutation flowshop scheduling and job sequences to be changed on different machines. A mixed-integer linear programming model for nonpermutation flowshop scheduling and the buffer requirement along with manufacturing implication is proposed. Ant colony optimization based heuristic is evaluated against Taillard's (1993) well-known flowshop benchmark instances, with 20 to 500 jobs to be processed on 5 to 20 machines (stages). Computation experiments show that the proposed algorithm is incumbent to the state-of-the-art ant colony optimization for flowshop with higher job to machine ratios, using the makespan as the optimization criterion

    Automatic Algorithm Design for Hybrid Flowshop Scheduling Problems

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    [EN] Industrial production scheduling problems are challenges that researchers have been trying to solve for decades. Many practical scheduling problems such as the hybrid flowshop are ATP-hard. As a result, researchers resort to metaheuristics to obtain effective and efficient solutions. The traditional design process of metaheuristics is mainly manual, often metaphor-based, biased by previous experience and prone to producing overly tailored methods that only work well on the tested problems and objectives. In this paper, we use an Automatic Algorithm Design (AAD) methodology to eliminate these limitations. AAD is capable of composing algorithms from components with minimal human intervention. We test the proposed MD for three different optimization objectives in the hybrid flowshop. Comprehensive computational and statistical testing demonstrates that automatically designed algorithms outperform specifically tailored state-of-the-art methods for the tested objectives in most cases.Pedro Alfaro-Fernandez and Ruben Ruiz are partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities, under the project "OPTEP-Port Terminal Operations Optimization" (No. RTI2018-094940-B-I00) financed with FEDER funds and under grants BES-2013-064858 and EEBB-I-15-10089. This work was supported by the COMEX project (P7/36) within the Interuniversity Attraction Poles Programme of the Belgian Science Policy Office. Thomas Stiitzle acknowledges support from the Belgian F.R.S.-FNRS, of which he is a Research Director.Alfaro-Fernandez, P.; Ruiz García, R.; Pagnozzi, F.; Stützle, T. (2020). Automatic Algorithm Design for Hybrid Flowshop Scheduling Problems. 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An Exact Method for Solving the Multi-Processor Flow-Shop. RAIRO - Operations Research, 34(1), 1-25. doi:10.1051/ro:2000103Chung, T.-P., & Liao, C.-J. (2013). An immunoglobulin-based artificial immune system for solving the hybrid flow shop problem. Applied Soft Computing, 13(8), 3729-3736. doi:10.1016/j.asoc.2013.03.006Cui, Z., & Gu, X. (2015). An improved discrete artificial bee colony algorithm to minimize the makespan on hybrid flow shop problems. Neurocomputing, 148, 248-259. doi:10.1016/j.neucom.2013.07.056Ding, J.-Y., Song, S., Gupta, J. N. D., Zhang, R., Chiong, R., & Wu, C. (2015). An improved iterated greedy algorithm with a Tabu-based reconstruction strategy for the no-wait flowshop scheduling problem. Applied Soft Computing, 30, 604-613. doi:10.1016/j.asoc.2015.02.006Dubois-Lacoste, J., López-Ibáñez, M., & Stützle, T. (2011). A hybrid TP+PLS algorithm for bi-objective flow-shop scheduling problems. 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    Overview on: sequencing in mixed model flowshop production line with static and dynamic context

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    In the present work a literature overview was given on solution techniques considering basic as well as more advanced and consequently more complex arrangements of mixed model flowshops. We first analyzed the occurrence of setup time/cost; existing solution techniques are mainly focused on permutation sequences. Thereafter we discussed objectives resulting in the introduction of variety of methods allowing resequencing of jobs within the line. The possibility of resequencing within the line ranges from 1) offline or intermittent buffers, 2) parallel stations, namely flexible, hybrid or compound flowshops, 3) merging and splitting of parallel lines, 4) re-entrant flowshops, to 5) change job attributes without physically interchanging the position. In continuation the differences in the consideration of static and dynamic demand was studied. Also intermittent setups are possible, depending on the horizon and including the possibility of resequencing, four problem cases were highlighted: static, semi dynamic, nearly dynamic and dynamic case. Finally a general overview was given on existing solution methods, including exact and approximation methods. The approximation methods are furthermore divided in two cases, know as heuristics and methaheuristic

    Internet of Things in urban waste collection

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    Nowadays, the waste collection management has an important role in urban areas. This paper faces this issue and proposes the application of a metaheuristic for the optimization of a weekly schedule and routing of the waste collection activities in an urban area. Differently to several contributions in literature, fixed periodic routes are not imposed. The results significantly improve the performance of the company involved, both in terms of resources used and costs saving

    Automatically Configuring Multi-objective Local Search Using Multi-objective Optimisation

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    International audienceAutomatic algorithm configuration (AAC) is becoming an increasingly crucial component in the design of high-performance solvers for many challenging combinatorial optimisation problems. This raises the question how to most effectively leverage AAC in the context of building or optimising multi-objective optimisation algorithms, and specifically , multi-objective local search procedures. Because the performance of multi-objective optimisation algorithms cannot be fully characterised by a single performance indicator, we believe that AAC for multi-objective local search should make use of multi-objective configuration procedures. We test this belief by using MO-ParamILS to automatically configure a highly parametric iterated local search framework for the classical and widely studied bi-objective permutation flowshop problem. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a multi-objective optimisation algorithm is automatically configured in a multi-objective fashion, and our results demonstrate that this approach can produce very good results as well as interesting insights into the efficacy of various strategies and components of a flexible multi-objective local search framework

    Iterative beam search algorithms for the permutation flowshop

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    We study an iterative beam search algorithm for the permutation flowshop (makespan and flowtime minimization). This algorithm combines branching strategies inspired by recent branch-and-bounds and a guidance strategy inspired by the LR heuristic. It obtains competitive results, reports many new-best-so-far solutions on the VFR benchmark (makespan minimization) and the Taillard benchmark (flowtime minimization) without using any NEH-based branching or iterative-greedy strategy. The source code is available at: https://gitlab.com/librallu/cats-pfsp

    Automatic Design of Multi-Objective Local Search Algorithms: Case Study on a bi-objective Permutation Flowshop Scheduling Problem

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    International audienceMulti-objective local search (MOLS) algorithms are efficient metaheuristics, which improve a set of solutions by using their neighbourhood to iteratively find better and better solutions. MOLS algorithms are versatile algorithms with many available strategies, first to select the solutions to explore, then to explore them, and finally to update the archive using some of the visited neighbours. In this paper, we propose a new generalisation of MOLS algorithms incorporating new recent ideas and algorithms. To be able to instantiate the many MOLS algorithms of the literature, our generalisation exposes numerous numerical and categorical parameters, raising the possibility of being automatically designed by an automatic algorithm configuration (AAC) mechanism. We investigate the worth of such an automatic design of MOLS algorithms using MO-ParamILS, a multi-objective AAC configurator, on the permutation flowshop scheduling problem, and demonstrate its worth against a traditional manual design
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