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Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems

Research output: Working paper

Published

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Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems. / Dokka, Trivikram; Crama, Yves ; Spieksma, Frits .
Lancaster: Lancaster University, 2014. (Lancaster University Management School Working Paper Series; Vol. 2014, No. 3).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Dokka, T, Crama, Y & Spieksma, F 2014 'Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems' Lancaster University Management School Working Paper Series, no. 3, vol. 2014, Lancaster University, Lancaster.

APA

Dokka, T., Crama, Y., & Spieksma, F. (2014). Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems. (Lancaster University Management School Working Paper Series; Vol. 2014, No. 3). Lancaster University.

Vancouver

Dokka T, Crama Y, Spieksma F. Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems. Lancaster: Lancaster University. 2014. (Lancaster University Management School Working Paper Series; 3).

Author

Dokka, Trivikram ; Crama, Yves ; Spieksma, Frits . / Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems. Lancaster : Lancaster University, 2014. (Lancaster University Management School Working Paper Series; 3).

Bibtex

@techreport{276aaf15fcfc4227afb7e4bba40a32ff,
title = "Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems",
abstract = "We consider a special class of axial multi-dimensional assignment problems called multi-dimensional vector assignment (MVA) problems. An instance of the MVA problem is defined by m disjoint sets, each of which contains the same number n of p-dimensional vectors with nonnegative integral components, and a cost function defined on vectors.The cost of an m-tuple of vectors is defined as the cost of their component-wise maximum. The problem is now to partition the m sets of vectors into n m-tuples so that no two vectors from the same set are in the same m-tuple and so that the total cost of the m-tuples is minimized. The main motivation comes from a yield optimization problem in semi-conductor manufacturing. We consider two classes of polynomial-time heuristics for MVA, namely, hub heuristics and sequential heuristics, and we study their approximation ratio. In particular, we show that when the cost function is monotone and subadditive, hub heuristics, as well as sequential heuristics, have finite approximation ratio for every fixed m. Moreover, we establish better approximation ratios for certain variants of hub heuristics and sequential heuristics when the cost function is monotone and submodular, or when it is additive. We provide examples to illustrate the tightness of our analysis. Furthermore, we show that the MVA problem is APX-hard even for the case m = 3 and for binary input vectors. Finally, we show that the problem can be solved in polynomial time in the special case of binary vectors with fixed dimension p.",
author = "Trivikram Dokka and Yves Crama and Frits Spieksma",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
series = "Lancaster University Management School Working Paper Series",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
number = "3",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems

AU - Dokka, Trivikram

AU - Crama, Yves

AU - Spieksma, Frits

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - We consider a special class of axial multi-dimensional assignment problems called multi-dimensional vector assignment (MVA) problems. An instance of the MVA problem is defined by m disjoint sets, each of which contains the same number n of p-dimensional vectors with nonnegative integral components, and a cost function defined on vectors.The cost of an m-tuple of vectors is defined as the cost of their component-wise maximum. The problem is now to partition the m sets of vectors into n m-tuples so that no two vectors from the same set are in the same m-tuple and so that the total cost of the m-tuples is minimized. The main motivation comes from a yield optimization problem in semi-conductor manufacturing. We consider two classes of polynomial-time heuristics for MVA, namely, hub heuristics and sequential heuristics, and we study their approximation ratio. In particular, we show that when the cost function is monotone and subadditive, hub heuristics, as well as sequential heuristics, have finite approximation ratio for every fixed m. Moreover, we establish better approximation ratios for certain variants of hub heuristics and sequential heuristics when the cost function is monotone and submodular, or when it is additive. We provide examples to illustrate the tightness of our analysis. Furthermore, we show that the MVA problem is APX-hard even for the case m = 3 and for binary input vectors. Finally, we show that the problem can be solved in polynomial time in the special case of binary vectors with fixed dimension p.

AB - We consider a special class of axial multi-dimensional assignment problems called multi-dimensional vector assignment (MVA) problems. An instance of the MVA problem is defined by m disjoint sets, each of which contains the same number n of p-dimensional vectors with nonnegative integral components, and a cost function defined on vectors.The cost of an m-tuple of vectors is defined as the cost of their component-wise maximum. The problem is now to partition the m sets of vectors into n m-tuples so that no two vectors from the same set are in the same m-tuple and so that the total cost of the m-tuples is minimized. The main motivation comes from a yield optimization problem in semi-conductor manufacturing. We consider two classes of polynomial-time heuristics for MVA, namely, hub heuristics and sequential heuristics, and we study their approximation ratio. In particular, we show that when the cost function is monotone and subadditive, hub heuristics, as well as sequential heuristics, have finite approximation ratio for every fixed m. Moreover, we establish better approximation ratios for certain variants of hub heuristics and sequential heuristics when the cost function is monotone and submodular, or when it is additive. We provide examples to illustrate the tightness of our analysis. Furthermore, we show that the MVA problem is APX-hard even for the case m = 3 and for binary input vectors. Finally, we show that the problem can be solved in polynomial time in the special case of binary vectors with fixed dimension p.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Lancaster University Management School Working Paper Series

BT - Approximation algorithms for multi-dimensional vector assignment problems

PB - Lancaster University

CY - Lancaster

ER -