Using expression graphs in optimization algorithms. (English) Zbl 1242.90131
Lee, Jon (ed.) et al., Mixed integer nonlinear programming. Selected papers based on the presentations at the IMA workshop mixed-integer nonlinear optimization: Algorithmic advances and applications, Minneapolis, MN, USA, November 17–21, 2008. New York, NY: Springer (ISBN 978-1-4614-1926-6/hbk; 978-1-4614-1927-3/ebook). The IMA Volumes in Mathematics and its Applications 154, 247-262 (2012).
Summary: An expression graph, informally speaking, represents a function in a way that can be manipulated to reveal various kinds of information about the function, such as its value or partial derivatives at specified arguments and bounds thereon in specified regions. (Various representations are possible, and all are equivalent in complexity, in that one can be converted to another in time linear in the expression’s size.) For mathematical programming problems, including the mixed-integer nonlinear programming problems that were the subject of the IMA workshop that led to this paper, there are various advantages to representing problems as collections of expression graphs. “Presolve” deductions can simplify the problem, e.g., by reducing the domains of some variables and proving that some inequality constraints are never or always active. To find global solutions, it is helpful sometimes to solve relaxed problems (e.g., allowing some “integer” variables to vary continuously or introducing convex or concave relaxations of some constraints or objectives), and to introduce “cuts” that exclude some relaxed variable values. There are various ways to compute bounds on an expression within a specified region or to compute relaxed expressions from expression graphs. This paper sketches some of them. As new information becomes available in the course of a branch-and-bound (or -cut) algorithm, some expression-graph manipulations and presolve deductions can be revisited and tightened, so keeping expression graphs around during the solution process can be helpful. Algebraic problem representations are a convenient source of expression graphs. One of my reasons for interest in the AMPL modeling language is that it delivers expression graphs to solvers.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1230.90005].
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1230.90005].
MSC:
90C11 | Mixed integer programming |
68R10 | Graph theory (including graph drawing) in computer science |
68U01 | General topics in computing methodologies |
68N20 | Theory of compilers and interpreters |
68W30 | Symbolic computation and algebraic computation |
05C85 | Graph algorithms (graph-theoretic aspects) |