A cutting-plane algorithm for the Steiner team orienteering problem
January 03, 2020 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Computers & industrial engineering
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Authors
Lucas AssunΓ§Γ£o, Geraldo Robson Mateus
arXiv ID
2001.00858
Category
cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms
Citations
11
Venue
Computers & industrial engineering
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
The Team Orienteering Problem (TOP) is an NP-hard routing problem in which a fleet of identical vehicles aims at collecting rewards (prizes) available at given locations, while satisfying restrictions on the travel times. In TOP, each location can be visited by at most one vehicle, and the goal is to maximize the total sum of rewards collected by the vehicles within a given time limit. In this paper, we propose a generalization of TOP, namely the Steiner Team Orienteering Problem (STOP). In STOP, we provide, additionally, a subset of mandatory locations. In this sense, STOP also aims at maximizing the total sum of rewards collected within the time limit, but, now, every mandatory location must be visited. In this work, we propose a new commodity-based formulation for STOP and use it within a cutting-plane scheme. The algorithm benefits from the compactness and strength of the proposed formulation and works by separating three families of valid inequalities, which consist of some general connectivity constraints, classical lifted cover inequalities based on dual bounds and a class of conflict cuts. To our knowledge, the last class of inequalities is also introduced in this work. A state-of-the-art branch-and-cut algorithm from the literature of TOP is adapted to STOP and used as baseline to evaluate the performance of the cutting-plane. Extensive computational experiments show the competitiveness of the new algorithm while solving several STOP and TOP instances. In particular, it is able to solve, in total, 14 more TOP instances than any other previous exact algorithm and finds eight new optimality certificates. With respect to the new STOP instances introduced in this work, our algorithm solves 30 more instances than the baseline.
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