51 research outputs found
Improvements and comparison of heuristics for solving the uncapacitated multisource Weber problem
Copyright @ 2000 INFORMSThe multisource Weber problem is to locate simultaneously m facilities in the Euclidean plane to minimize the total transportation cost for satisfying the demand of n fixed users, each supplied from its closest facility. Many heuristics have been proposed for this problem, as well as a few exact algorithms. Heuristics are needed to solve quickly large problems and to provide good initial solutions for exact algorithms. We compare various heuristics, i.e., alternative location-allocation (Cooper 1964), projection (Bongartz et al. 1994), Tabu search (Brimberg and Mladenovic 1996a), p-Median plus Weber (Hansen ct al. 1996), Genetic search and several versions of Variable Neighbourhood search. Based on empirical tests that are reported, it is found that most traditional and some recent heuristics give poor results when the number of facilities to locate is large and that Variable Neighbourhood search gives consistently best results, on average, in moderate computing time.This study was supported by the Department
of National Defence (Canada) Academic Research; Office of Naval Research Grant N00014-92-J-1194, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Grant GPO 105574 and Fonds pour la Formation des Chercheurs et lâAide a la Recherche Grant 32EQ 1048; and by an International Postdoctoral Fellowship of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
of Canada, Grant OGPOO 39682
Chase-and-run between adjacent cell populations promotes directional collective migration
Collective cell migration in morphogenesis and cancer progression often involves the coordination of multiple cell types. How reciprocal interactions between adjacent cell populations lead to new emergent behaviours remains unknown. Here we studied the interaction between neural crest (NC) cells, a highly migratory cell population, and placodal cells, an epithelial tissue that contributes to sensory organs. We found that NC cells chase placodal cells by chemotaxis, and placodal cells run when contacted by NC. Chemotaxis to Sdf1 underlies the chase, and repulsion involving PCP and N-cadherin signalling is responsible for the run. This chase-and-run requires the generation of asymmetric forces, which depend on local inhibition of focal adhesions. The cell interactions described here are essential for correct NC migration and for segregation of placodes in vivo and are likely to represent a general mechanism of coordinated migration
Job-Shop Scheduling by Simulated Annealing Combined with Deterministic Local Search
: The Job-Shop Scheduling Problem (JSSP) is one of the most difficult NP-hard combinatorial optimization problems. This paper proposes a new method for solving JSSPs based on simulated annealing (SA), a stochastic local search, enhanced by shifting bottleneck (SB), a problem specific deterministic local search. In our method new schedules are generated by a variant of Giffler and Thompson's active scheduler with operation permutations on the critical path. SA selects a new schedule and probabilistically accepts or rejects it. The modified SB is applied to repair the rejected schedule; the new schedule is accepted if an improvement is made. Experimental results showed the proposed method found near optimal schedules for the difficult benchmark problems and outperformed other existing local search algorithms. Key Words: Simulated annealing, shifting bottleneck, job-shop scheduling, heuristics, local search 1. Background Scheduling is allocating shared resources over time to competi..
Dynamic Vehicle Routing and Dispatching
: Dynamic vehicle routing and dispatching refers to a wide range of problems where information on the problem is revealed to the decision maker concurrently with the determination of the solution. These problems have recently emerged as an active area of research due to recent technological advances that allow real-time information to be quickly obtained and processed. There are probably as many variants of these problems as there are real-world applications. After a brief overview of this broad domain, the paper will then focus on problems motivated by courier services and demand responsive transportation systems. These systems typically evolve within a local service area over a relatively short period of time (typically, a few hours), thus putting stringent response time requirements on the decision maker. They are also characterized by a strong routing component: many tasks can be allocated at once to the same vehicle and these tasks must be appropriately sequenced. The ..
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