Multidimensional assignment problem

The multidimensional assignment problem (MAP) is a fundamental combinatorial optimization problem which was introduced by William Pierskalla.[1] This problem can be seen as a generalization of the linear assignment problem.[2] In words, the problem can be described as follows:

An instance of the problem has a number of agents (i.e., cardinality parameter) and a number of job characteristics (i.e., dimensionality parameter) such as task, machine, time interval, etc. For example, an agent can be assigned to perform task X, on machine Y, during time interval Z. Any agent can be assigned to perform a job with any combination of unique job characteristics at some cost. These costs may vary based on the assignment of agent to a combination of job characteristics - specific task, machine, time interval, etc. The problem is to minimize the total cost of assigning the agents so that the assignment of agents to each job characteristic is an injective function, or one-to-one function from agents to a given job characteristic.

Alternatively, describing the problem using graph theory:

The multidimensional assignment problem consists of finding, in a weighted multipartite graph, a matching of a given size, in which the sum of weights of the edges is minimum.[3]

Formal definition edit

Various formulations of this problem can be found in the literature. Using cost-functions, the  –dimensional assignment problem (or  –MAP) can be stated as follows:

Given   sets,   and  , of equal size, together with a cost array or multidimensional weight function   :  , find   permutations   : A  such that the total cost function:
 

is minimized.[4]

Problem parameters edit

The multidimensional assignment problem (MAP) has two key parameters that determine the size of a problem instance:

  1. The dimensionality parameter  
  2. The cardinality parameter  , where   denotes the number of elements in  .

Size of cost array edit

Any problem instance of the MAP with parameters   has its specific cost array  , which consists of   instance-specific costs/weights parameters  .   is the size of cost array.

Number of feasible solutions edit

The feasible region or solution space of the MAP is very large. The number   of feasible solutions (the size of the MAP instance) depends on the MAP parameters  . Specifically,  .[2]

Computational complexity edit

The problem is generally NP-hard. In other words, there is no known algorithm for solving this problem in polynomial time, and so a long computational time may be needed for solving problem instances of even moderate size (based on dimensionality and cardinality parameters).[5]

Applications edit

The problem found application in many domains:

References edit

  1. ^ a b Pierskalla, William P. (1968). "Letter to the Editor—The Multidimensional Assignment Problem". Operations Research. 16 (2). INFORMS: 422–431. doi:10.1287/opre.16.2.422.
  2. ^ a b c Kammerdiner, Alla; Semenov, Alexander; Pasiliao, Eduardo (2021). "Multidimensional Assignment Problem for multipartite entity resolution". arXiv:2112.03346 [cs.DM].
  3. ^ Natu, Shardul; Date, Ketan; Nagi, Rakesh (2020). "GPU-accelerated Lagrangian heuristic for multidimensional assignment problems with decomposable costs". Parallel Computing. 97: 102666. doi:10.1016/j.parco.2020.102666. ISSN 0167-8191. S2CID 221667518.
  4. ^ Karapetyan, Daniel; Gutin, Gregory (2011-06-01). "Local search heuristics for the multidimensional assignment problem" (PDF). Journal of Heuristics. 17 (3): 201–249. doi:10.1007/s10732-010-9133-3. ISSN 1572-9397. S2CID 3446729.
  5. ^ Nguyen, Duc Manh; Le Thi, Hoai An; Pham Dinh, Tao (2012-10-12). "Solving the Multidimensional Assignment Problem by a Cross-Entropy method". Journal of Combinatorial Optimization. 27 (4): 808–823. doi:10.1007/s10878-012-9554-z. ISSN 1382-6905. S2CID 254658376.
  6. ^ Poore, Aubrey B. (1994). "Multidimensional assignment formulation of data association problems arising from multitarget and multisensor tracking". Computational Optimization and Applications. 3 (1): 27–57. doi:10.1007/BF01299390. S2CID 33848795.
  7. ^ Pusztaszeri, Jean-François; Rensing, Paul E.; Liebling, Thomas M. (1996). "Tracking elementary particles near their primary vertex: a combinatorial approach". Journal of Global Optimization. 9 (1): 41–64. doi:10.1007/BF00121750. S2CID 2002168.
  8. ^ Kammerdiner, Alla R.; Guererro, Andre N. (2019). "Data-driven combinatorial optimization for sensor-based assessment of near falls". Annals of Operations Research. 276 (1–2): 137–153. doi:10.1007/s10479-017-2585-1. ISSN 0254-5330. S2CID 254223885.