merging nodes in search trees an exact exponential algorithm for the single machine total tardiness scheduling problem

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Bibliographic Details
Title: merging nodes in search trees an exact exponential algorithm for the single machine total tardiness scheduling problem
Authors: Shang, Lei, Garraffa, Michele, Della Croce, Federico, T'Kindt, Vincent
Contributors: Lei Shang and Michele Garraffa and Federico Della Croce and Vincent T'Kindt
Publisher Information: Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik, 2018.
Publication Year: 2018
Subject Terms: Exact exponential algorithm, Single machine total tardiness, Branch-and-merge, ddc:004
Description: This paper proposes an exact exponential algorithm for the problem of minimizing the total tardiness of jobs on a single machine. It exploits the structure of a basic branch-and-reduce framework based on the well known Lawler's decomposition property. The proposed algorithm, called branch-and-merge, is an improvement of the branch-and-reduce technique with the embedding of a node merging operation. Its time complexity is O*(2.247^n) keeping the space complexity polynomial. The branch-and-merge technique is likely to be generalized to other sequencing problems with similar decomposition properties.
Document Type: Article
Conference object
File Description: application/pdf
DOI: 10.4230/lipics.ipec.2017.28
Access URL: https://drops.dagstuhl.de/opus/volltexte/2018/8546/
https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.IPEC.2017.28
https://drops.dagstuhl.de/entities/document/10.4230/LIPIcs.IPEC.2017.28
Rights: CC BY
Accession Number: edsair.dedup.wf.002..be9c3dbeca2bc72fd48a6980ac7e08a1
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
Abstract:This paper proposes an exact exponential algorithm for the problem of minimizing the total tardiness of jobs on a single machine. It exploits the structure of a basic branch-and-reduce framework based on the well known Lawler's decomposition property. The proposed algorithm, called branch-and-merge, is an improvement of the branch-and-reduce technique with the embedding of a node merging operation. Its time complexity is O*(2.247^n) keeping the space complexity polynomial. The branch-and-merge technique is likely to be generalized to other sequencing problems with similar decomposition properties.
DOI:10.4230/lipics.ipec.2017.28