Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1132375 Transportation Research Part B: Methodological 2011 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

In practice, a train-conflict resolution is decentralized around dispatchers each of whom controls a few segments in a global railway network with her rule-of-thumb to operational data. Conceptually, the global sub-optimality or infeasibility of the decentralized system is resolved by a network controller who coordinates the dispatchers and train operators at the lower layers on a real-time basis. However, such notion of a multi-layer system cannot be effectual unless the top layer is able to provide a global solution soon enough for the dynamic lower layers to adapt in a seamless manner. Unfortunately, a train-conflict resolution problem is NP-hard as formally established in this paper and an effective solution method traded off between computation time and solution quality has been lacking in literature. Thus, we propose a column-generation-based algorithm that exploits the separability of the problem. A key ingredient of the algorithm is an efficient heuristic for the pricing subproblem for column generation. Tested on the real data from the Seoul metropolitan railway network, the algorithm provides near-optimal conflict-free timetables in a few seconds for most cases. The performance of the proposed algorithm is compared to the ones of the previous MIP-based heuristic by Törnquist and Persson (2007) and the priority-based heuristic by Sahin (1999).

Research highlights► A train-conflict resolution problem is NP-hard. ► We propose a column-generation-based algorithm. ► The proposed algorithm is based on the separability of the problem. ► The performance of the proposed algorithm is compared to the ones of the previous MIP-based heuristic.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Decision Sciences Management Science and Operations Research
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