Blum, Christian.

Construct, Merge, Solve & Adapt A Hybrid Metaheuristic for Combinatorial Optimization / [electronic resource] : by Christian Blum. - 1st ed. 2024. - XVI, 192 p. 58 illus., 43 illus. in color. online resource. - Computational Intelligence Methods and Applications, 2510-1773 . - Computational Intelligence Methods and Applications, .

Introduction to CMSA -- Self-Adaptive CMSA -- Adding Learning to CMSA -- Replacing Hard Mathematical Models with Set Covering Formulations -- Application of CMSA in the Presence of Non-Binary Variables -- Additional Research Lines Concerning CMSA.

This book describes a general hybrid metaheuristic for combinatorial optimization labeled Construct, Merge, Solve & Adapt (CMSA). The general idea of standard CMSA is the following one. At each iteration, a number of valid solutions to the tackled problem instance are generated in a probabilistic way. Hereby, each of these solutions is composed of a set of solution components. The components found in the generated solutions are then added to an initially empty sub-instance. Next, an exact solver is applied in order to compute the best solution of the sub-instance, which is then used to update the sub-instance provided as input for the next iteration. In this way, the power of exact solvers can be exploited for solving problem instances much too large for a standalone application of the solver. Important research lines on CMSA from recent years are covered in this book. After an introductory chapter about standard CMSA, subsequent chapters cover a self-adaptive CMSA variant as well as a variant equipped with a learning component for improving the quality of the generated solutions over time. Furthermore, on outlining the advantages of using set-covering-based integer linear programming models for sub-instance solving, the author shows how to apply CMSA to problems naturally modelled by non-binary integer linear programming models. The book concludes with a chapter on topics such as the development of a problem-agnostic CMSA and the relation between large neighborhood search and CMSA. Combinatorial optimization problems used in the book as test cases include the minimum dominating set problem, the variable-sized bin packing problem, and an electric vehicle routing problem. The book will be valuable and is intended for researchers, professionals and graduate students working in a wide range of fields, such as combinatorial optimization, algorithmics, metaheuristics, mathematical modeling, evolutionary computing, operations research, artificial intelligence, or statistics.

9783031601033

10.1007/978-3-031-60103-3 doi


Artificial intelligence.
Computational intelligence.
Computer science.
Operations research.
Management science.
Computer simulation.
Artificial Intelligence.
Computational Intelligence.
Theory of Computation.
Operations Research, Management Science.
Computer Modelling.

Q334-342 TA347.A78

006.3