Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4959356 European Journal of Operational Research 2017 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
To solve integer linear programs, primal algorithms follow an augmenting sequence of integer solutions leading to an optimal solution. In this work, we focus on a particular primal algorithm, the integral simplex using decomposition (ISUD). To find the next point, one solves a linear program to select an augmenting direction for the current point from a cone of feasible directions. To ensure that this linear program is bounded, a normalization constraint is added and the optimization is performed on a section of the cone. The solution of the linear program, i.e., the direction proposed by the algorithm, strongly depends on the chosen normalization weights, and so does the likelihood that the next solution is integer. We modify ISUD so that the normalization is dynamically updated whenever the direction leads to a fractional solution, to penalize that direction. We propose update strategies, based on new theoretical and experimental results. To prove the efficiency of our strategies, we show that our version of the algorithm yields better results than the former version and than classical branch-and-bound techniques on a benchmark of industrial aircrew scheduling instances. The benchmark that we propose here is, to the best of our knowledge, comparable to no other from the literature. It provides large-scale instances with up to 1700 flights and 115,000 pairings, hence as many constraints and variables, and the instances are given in a set-partitioning form together with initial solutions that accurately mimic those of industrial applications. Our work shows the strong potential of primal algorithms for the crew scheduling problem, which is a key challenge for large airlines.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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