46 research outputs found

    Matrix bids in combinatorial auctions: expressiveness and micro-economic properties

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    A combinatorial auction is an auction where multiple items are for sale simultaneously to a set of buyers. Furthermore, buyers are allowed to place bids on subsets of the available items. This paper focuses on a combinatorial auction where a bidder can express his preferences by means of a so-called ordered matrix bid. Ordered matrix bids are a bidding language that allows a compact representation of a bidder''s preferences, and was developed by Day (2004). We give an overview of how a combinatorial auction with matrix bids works. We elaborate on the relevance of the matrix bid auction and we develop methods to verify whether a given matrix bid satisfies properties related to micro-economic theory as free disposal, subadditivity, submodularity and the gross substitutes property. Finally, we investigate how a collection of arbitrary bids can be represented as a matrix bid.microeconomics ;

    Interval Scheduling: A Survey

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    In interval scheduling, not only the processing times of the jobs but also their starting times are given. This article surveys the area of interval scheduling and presents proofs of results that have been known within the community for some time. We first review the complexity and approximability of different variants of interval scheduling problems. Next, we motivate the relevance of interval scheduling problems by providing an overview of applications that have appeared in literature. Finally, we focus on algorithmic results for two important variants of interval scheduling problems. In one variant we deal with nonidentical machines: instead of each machine being continuously available, there is a given interval for each machine in which it is available. In another variant, the machines are continuously available but they are ordered, and each job has a given "maximal" machine on which it can be processed. We investigate the complexity of these problems and describe algorithms for their solution

    Cache as ca$h can

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    In this contribution several caching strategies for the World Wide Weba re studied. Special attention is paid to the so-called proxy placement, i.e. placing of caches on carefully selected nodes in the network near to the end users

    Local search heuristics for the multidimensional assignment problem

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    The Multidimensional Assignment Problem (MAP) (abbreviated s-AP in the case of s dimensions) is an extension of the well-known assignment problem. The most studied case of MAP is 3-AP, though the problems with larger values of s also have a large number of applications. We consider several known neighborhoods, generalize them and propose some new ones. The heuristics are evaluated both theoretically and experimentally and dominating algorithms are selected. We also demonstrate that a combination of two neighborhoods may yield a heuristics which is superior to both of its components

    Assignment and scheduling algorithms in automated manufacturing

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    Geometric three-dimensional assignment problems

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    We investigate two geometric special cases of the three-dimensional assignment problem: Given are three sets B, R and G (blue, red and green) each containing n grid points in the Euclidean plane. We want to find a partition of B R G into n three0colored triangles such that (a) the total circumference of all triangles or (b) the total area of all triangles becomes minimum. Both versions of the problem are proved to be NP-hard

    The no-wait flow-shop paradox

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