Insertion Heuristics for Central Cycle Problems

University of Aberdeen Business School Working Paper No. 2006-07

Posted: 15 Jan 2008

See all articles by John D. Lamb

John D. Lamb

University of Aberdeen - Business School

Date Written: November 2006

Abstract

A central cycle problem requires a cycle that is reasonably short and keeps a the maximum distance from any node not on the cycle to its nearest node on the cycle reasonably low. The objective may be to minimise maximum distance or cycle length and the solution may have further constraints. Most classes of central cycle problems are NP-hard. This paper investigates insertion heuristics for central cycle problems, drawing on insertion heuristics for p-centres [7] and travelling salesman tours [21]. It shows that a modified farthest insertion heuristic has reasonable worst-case bounds for a particular class of problem. It then compares the performance of two farthest insertion heuristics against each other and against bounds (where available) obtained by integer programming on a range of problems from TSPLIB [20]. It shows that a simple farthest insertion heuristic is fast, performs well in practice and so is likely to be useful for a general problems or as the basis for more complex heuristics for specific problems.

Keywords: tour, cycle, centre, eccentricity, cyclelength

Suggested Citation

Lamb, John D., Insertion Heuristics for Central Cycle Problems (November 2006). University of Aberdeen Business School Working Paper No. 2006-07, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1083628

John D. Lamb (Contact Author)

University of Aberdeen - Business School ( email )

Edward Wright Building
Dunbar Street
Aberdeen, Scotland AB24 3QY
United Kingdom

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