8,403 research outputs found
A generic optimising feature extraction method using multiobjective genetic programming
In this paper, we present a generic, optimising feature extraction method using multiobjective genetic programming. We re-examine the feature extraction problem and show that effective feature extraction can significantly enhance the performance of pattern recognition systems with simple classifiers. A framework is presented to evolve optimised feature extractors that transform an input pattern space into a decision space in which maximal class separability is obtained. We have applied this method to real world datasets from the UCI Machine Learning and StatLog databases to verify our approach and compare our proposed method with other reported results. We conclude that our algorithm is able to produce classifiers of superior (or equivalent) performance to the conventional classifiers examined, suggesting removal of the need to exhaustively evaluate a large family of conventional classifiers on any new problem. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Decomposition, Reformulation, and Diving in University Course Timetabling
In many real-life optimisation problems, there are multiple interacting
components in a solution. For example, different components might specify
assignments to different kinds of resource. Often, each component is associated
with different sets of soft constraints, and so with different measures of soft
constraint violation. The goal is then to minimise a linear combination of such
measures. This paper studies an approach to such problems, which can be thought
of as multiphase exploitation of multiple objective-/value-restricted
submodels. In this approach, only one computationally difficult component of a
problem and the associated subset of objectives is considered at first. This
produces partial solutions, which define interesting neighbourhoods in the
search space of the complete problem. Often, it is possible to pick the initial
component so that variable aggregation can be performed at the first stage, and
the neighbourhoods to be explored next are guaranteed to contain feasible
solutions. Using integer programming, it is then easy to implement heuristics
producing solutions with bounds on their quality.
Our study is performed on a university course timetabling problem used in the
2007 International Timetabling Competition, also known as the Udine Course
Timetabling Problem. In the proposed heuristic, an objective-restricted
neighbourhood generator produces assignments of periods to events, with
decreasing numbers of violations of two period-related soft constraints. Those
are relaxed into assignments of events to days, which define neighbourhoods
that are easier to search with respect to all four soft constraints. Integer
programming formulations for all subproblems are given and evaluated using ILOG
CPLEX 11. The wider applicability of this approach is analysed and discussed.Comment: 45 pages, 7 figures. Improved typesetting of figures and table
An exact solution approach based on column generation and a partial-objective constraint to design a cellulosic biofuel supply chain
AbstractThis study provides an exact solution method to solve a mixed-integer linear programming model that prescribes an optimal design of a cellulosic biofuel supply chain. An embedded structure can be transformed to a generalized minimum cost flow problem, which is used as a sub-problem in a column generation approach, to solve the linear relaxation of the mixed-integer program. This study proposes a dynamic programming algorithm to solve the sub-problem in O(m) time, generating improving path-flows. It proposes an inequality, called the partial objective constraint, which is based on the portion of the objective function associated with binary variables, to underlie a branch-and-cut approach. Computational tests show that the proposed solution approach solves most instances faster than a state-of-the-art commercial solver (CPLEX)
Industrial and Tramp Ship Routing Problems: Closing the Gap for Real-Scale Instances
Recent studies in maritime logistics have introduced a general ship routing
problem and a benchmark suite based on real shipping segments, considering
pickups and deliveries, cargo selection, ship-dependent starting locations,
travel times and costs, time windows, and incompatibility constraints, among
other features. Together, these characteristics pose considerable challenges
for exact and heuristic methods, and some cases with as few as 18 cargoes
remain unsolved. To face this challenge, we propose an exact branch-and-price
(B&P) algorithm and a hybrid metaheuristic. Our exact method generates
elementary routes, but exploits decremental state-space relaxation to speed up
column generation, heuristic strong branching, as well as advanced
preprocessing and route enumeration techniques. Our metaheuristic is a
sophisticated extension of the unified hybrid genetic search. It exploits a
set-partitioning phase and uses problem-tailored variation operators to
efficiently handle all the problem characteristics. As shown in our
experimental analyses, the B&P optimally solves 239/240 existing instances
within one hour. Scalability experiments on even larger problems demonstrate
that it can optimally solve problems with around 60 ships and 200 cargoes
(i.e., 400 pickup and delivery services) and find optimality gaps below 1.04%
on the largest cases with up to 260 cargoes. The hybrid metaheuristic
outperforms all previous heuristics and produces near-optimal solutions within
minutes. These results are noteworthy, since these instances are comparable in
size with the largest problems routinely solved by shipping companies
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